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v-exo.com is finally live (kinda)

Today is the day. v-exo.com is finally online for the first time. It’s not perfect, not even close, but it exists. This is the beginning of something I’ve been thinking about for a while now.
v-exo.com is finally live (kinda)
2026-04-08
Day 1 – It’s live

So yeah… today I finally pushed v-exo.com online. Not "finished", not "ready", not even close to polished... but it’s there.

And honestly that matters more than I thought it would. Because getting something online is always the hardest part. Not the idea, not the design, not even the code… just the moment where you stop tweaking and actually say "okay, this goes live now".

Note

This is a starting point. Expect things to change. A lot.

What v-exo is supposed to be

The idea behind v-exo is pretty simple: A clean place for gaming-related content, but also useful stuff around computers in general.

News, guides, small fixes, setups… maybe some deeper stuff later. Not just copy-paste articles, but actually useful content.

No clutter, no weird SEO spam, no "10 tips you already know". Just stuff that feels worth reading.

At least that’s the goal. Let’s see if I can actually pull that off.

What exists right now

Basic structure, posting system, layout, first content framework.

What’s missing

A lot. More content, better UI polish, performance tweaks, probably bugs I haven’t even seen yet.

It’s not finished (and that’s fine)

If you’re expecting a fully polished site… yeah, this ain’t it. There are rough edges, things that feel a bit off, and probably some decisions I’ll regret in a week.

But waiting until everything is perfect usually means you never ship anything. So this time I didn’t wait.

Tip

Shipping early > overthinking forever.

What happens next

From here on it’s basically iteration. More posts, better structure, improving the design so it doesn’t feel like "just another site".

I want this to feel a bit more like a proper gaming magazine, but not only that. It should also cover useful stuff around computers in general... tips, setups, small fixes, things that actually help in everyday use.

Less generic filler, more things that feel worth your time. Basically something I would actually use myself.

And yeah… that means a lot of work ahead.

Warning

Things might break, change, disappear or get rebuilt. That’s part of the process.

Final thoughts

Right now I’m just glad it’s live. That’s it.

If people end up using it, even better. If not… I’ll keep building anyway.

Let’s see where this goes.