IOS status bar on a android phone on @GooglePlay I don't know how did this get the green pass from the digital marketing team at walmart, then at googleplay
The real reason Dribbble died? Because design died.
The early 2010s were a golden age—the best era of design in human history. It was chaos, creativity, and pure, unfiltered exploration.
Remember the Daily UI challenge? We all got the same prompt—music player, login screen, whatever—and flooded Dribbble with our wildest ideas. I did that for 100 days straight. Then I did it again. And again. And I loved every second of it.
Back then, designers actually pushed boundaries. We explored ideas without worrying if they could be built. We experimented with wild, unconventional patterns and posted them without hesitation.
No rules. No restrictions. Just raw creativity. If we could dream it, we designed it—and we shared it.
Then minimalism took over. We stripped every bit of emotion out of design, followed it up with design systems, tokens, variables, and variables nested within variables.
Now? Most of us don’t even know what era we’re in. Do we even have one anymore?
Design has been sanitized. Systematized. The fun stripped away. Creativity is no longer the priority.
So yeah, maybe I have a little resentment toward design systems, tokens, variables, and all the things that turned design into a rigid machine.
Maybe it’s because some of us were lucky enough to experience design before it became a system. And maybe—just maybe—we carry a chip on our shoulder, hoping for even a spark of that magic to return.
@CRYPTO8FANS @BinanceHelpDesk I think Binance has one the best UI considering the amount of features, products and micro services that they offer … I fully disagree with what you said good sir.