A build contest really knows how to get developers fired up. When projects reward genuine innovation in dApps, you see something real happen—not just hype, but actual builders showing up with creative solutions. CodeXero seems to get that energy right. The whole ecosystem benefits when devs share their work, compare ideas, and push each other to do better. That's how you grow from speculation into actual tech momentum. More of this kind of thing is exactly what Web3 needs.
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MevWhisperer
· 12-20 23:57
A true building contest can truly inspire developers' enthusiasm. Hype alone is useless; it also requires real money and actual innovation.
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EyeOfTheTokenStorm
· 12-20 16:54
From historical data, developer competitions can indeed boost project popularity, but the key is whether they can be converted into real applications afterward. How long CodeXero can sustain this remains to be seen.
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GasFeeSurvivor
· 12-20 16:54
NGL Build Contest definitely can inspire creativity, but can CodeXero really attract top developers... I'm a bit skeptical.
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NestedFox
· 12-20 16:46
Building competitions can indeed motivate developers. CodeXero did a good job this time; it's truly more reliable than those air projects.
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GlueGuy
· 12-20 16:29
This is what Web3 should look like—focusing on development, not empty talk.
A build contest really knows how to get developers fired up. When projects reward genuine innovation in dApps, you see something real happen—not just hype, but actual builders showing up with creative solutions. CodeXero seems to get that energy right. The whole ecosystem benefits when devs share their work, compare ideas, and push each other to do better. That's how you grow from speculation into actual tech momentum. More of this kind of thing is exactly what Web3 needs.