Project descriptions filled with jargon? That's a fast track to nowhere. If regular users can't grasp what you're building in plain language, you've already lost half your audience before they even try. The best projects explain themselves simply—no buzzwords, no corporate fluff. Keep it real, keep it clear, or watch people move on to the next thing.
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PumpStrategist
· 42m ago
The pattern has formed, and the chip distribution shows that big players are exiting. Those still listening to the project team tell stories are all typical retail investors. Simple and straightforward explanations are the only way to survive; complex explanations are just to cover up poor fundamentals.
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GateUser-26d7f434
· 12h ago
In plain terms, it's a bunch of project copywriting filled with technical jargon, 99% of which is self-deception. Truly outstanding projects have already explained complex matters in a very simple way, and that is real strength.
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SleepyValidator
· 12h ago
Honestly, I just skip over project documents filled with a bunch of industry jargon. Really, the white paper reads like a book from the heavens; no matter how good the content is, it's useless.
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TokenTaxonomist
· 12h ago
actually, statistically speaking—let me pull up my spreadsheet real quick—projects that obfuscate their value prop via jargon exhibit a 67% higher churn rate. it's not even debatable at that point. plain language isn't dumbing down, it's natural selection in action
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ZenZKPlayer
· 12h ago
Exactly right, a bunch of jargon really discourages a lot of people. I've seen many projects where the copywriting is as cryptic as a password, requiring a lawyer to decode it. And the result? The users are long gone.
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AirdropHarvester
· 12h ago
Really, just a bunch of jargon to attract people? Wake up, buddy.
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InfraVibes
· 12h ago
Well said. I've seen too many project documents filled with jargon, and as a result, no one can understand them. Then they blame the users for being too inexperienced.
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FromMinerToFarmer
· 12h ago
Honestly, looking at those project documents full of buzzwords is just annoying. To put it plainly, it's just guilt.
Project descriptions filled with jargon? That's a fast track to nowhere. If regular users can't grasp what you're building in plain language, you've already lost half your audience before they even try. The best projects explain themselves simply—no buzzwords, no corporate fluff. Keep it real, keep it clear, or watch people move on to the next thing.