Hides the 'Great job!' so you can focus on the 'Here's what's broken. A Chrome Extension that hides positive comments and shows you only the hate. See the worst, ignore the rest.
I built OnlyHate after getting tired of scrolling through endless praise on product review videos and feeling like the real feedback was always buried.
As a viewer, I often wondered if a product was actually good or if the problems were just drowned out by hype. As someone who buys things based on reviews, I wanted a faster way to spot recurring complaints before purchasing. And for creators, I kept noticing how valuable criticism gets lost, even though that kind of feedback is usually what helps improve content the most.
OnlyHate started as a simple experiment to surface that hidden side of comment sections. The goal is not negativity for its own sake, but visibility. It helps surface criticism, complaints, and concerns that are usually pushed out of view.
Who Is It For? 📹 Content Creators — Find actionable feedback faster 📊 Social Media Managers — Monitor brand sentiment efficiently 🔬 Researchers — Study negative discourse patterns 🛒 Buyers & Shoppers — Spot recurring complaints and red flags before purchasing 🧑 Regular User — Or you could be a regular user who just seeks entertainment from negative things
Sometimes everything looks like sunshine and rainbows in the comments. This just helps answer the question, is that really the full story?
Would love to hear how others look for criticism. Do you actively search for it, or do you feel it is hard to find?
Report
Great idea! Must be useful to see realistic comments. 👍🏻
Report
@pasha_tseluyko you mean not useful to see realistic comments?
"totally misleading" comment as u see in one of images up,you think its good idea to remove it?
@pasha_tseluyko@srkorwho Appreciate the comments. Just to clarify, OnlyHate doesn’t remove comments like “totally misleading”, it surfaces them. The goal is to make critical feedback easier to find when it’s usually buried under praise.
Nothing is deleted or censored, and there’s a sensitivity slider so you can control how strict the filtering is. It’s simply a different way/perspective of viewing the same comment section.
Report
Congrats on the launch - this is a bold and very opinionated take on feedback consumption. I like the idea of intentionally surfacing critical comments to cut through noise and false validation. For creators who actually want to improve, this could be surprisingly useful. Curious how you’re thinking about context so constructive criticism isn’t lost alongside pure trolling.
@vik_sh Thanks, Viktor. That’s a great point and honestly one of the core tensions I’ve been thinking about.
Right now, OnlyHate is intentionally opinionated in that it prioritizes visibility of criticism over comfort. The goal isn’t to treat all negative comments as equally valuable, but to surface them so creators can decide what’s signal and what’s noise. Constructive criticism and low-effort trolling often get grouped together in default comment sorting, and I wanted to flip that dynamic.
Context is something I’m actively exploring next. Things like recurring themes, frequency of similar complaints, and sentiment strength can help separate useful criticism from pure trolling without hiding either by default. The idea is to give creators more control over how they interpret feedback, not to make that decision for them.
Really appreciate you calling that out. Feedback like this is exactly what helps shape where the product goes next.
Report
Like the idea, but confused by the branding. Negative criticism isn’t hate.
@joshua_k1 That’s a fair point. The name is intentionally provocative, but the product itself is about surfacing criticism for visibility, not promoting hate or harassment.
Report
interesting idea. Sometimes "negative" feedback can be just as noisy as praise. I like to take it all in stride and listen to users to know where/when I should lean in/ and where I should maybe back off. How's the product been received so far?
@nel_lansley Appreciate that perspective, and I agree that negative feedback needs context to be useful. So far the reception’s been positive, especially from creators using it as a temporary lens to spot recurring issues rather than a default view. I’m also getting a lot of requests for support on other platforms like Facebook and X, as well as additional language support, which are the next areas I’m exploring.
Report
@staniellg very cool. I can 100% see the value prop from creators who deal with unproductive negative feedback. Best of luck to you
I built OnlyHate after getting tired of scrolling through endless praise on product review videos and feeling like the real feedback was always buried.
As a viewer, I often wondered if a product was actually good or if the problems were just drowned out by hype. As someone who buys things based on reviews, I wanted a faster way to spot recurring complaints before purchasing. And for creators, I kept noticing how valuable criticism gets lost, even though that kind of feedback is usually what helps improve content the most.
OnlyHate started as a simple experiment to surface that hidden side of comment sections. The goal is not negativity for its own sake, but visibility. It helps surface criticism, complaints, and concerns that are usually pushed out of view.
Who Is It For? 📹 Content Creators — Find actionable feedback faster 📊 Social Media Managers — Monitor brand sentiment efficiently 🔬 Researchers — Study negative discourse patterns 🛒 Buyers & Shoppers — Spot recurring complaints and red flags before purchasing 🧑 Regular User — Or you could be a regular user who just seeks entertainment from negative things
Sometimes everything looks like sunshine and rainbows in the comments. This just helps answer the question, is that really the full story?
Would love to hear how others look for criticism. Do you actively search for it, or do you feel it is hard to find?
OnlyHate
Happy 2026 PH!
I built OnlyHate after getting tired of scrolling through endless praise on product review videos and feeling like the real feedback was always buried.
As a viewer, I often wondered if a product was actually good or if the problems were just drowned out by hype. As someone who buys things based on reviews, I wanted a faster way to spot recurring complaints before purchasing. And for creators, I kept noticing how valuable criticism gets lost, even though that kind of feedback is usually what helps improve content the most.
OnlyHate started as a simple experiment to surface that hidden side of comment sections. The goal is not negativity for its own sake, but visibility. It helps surface criticism, complaints, and concerns that are usually pushed out of view.
Who Is It For?
📹 Content Creators — Find actionable feedback faster
📊 Social Media Managers — Monitor brand sentiment efficiently
🔬 Researchers — Study negative discourse patterns
🛒 Buyers & Shoppers — Spot recurring complaints and red flags before purchasing
🧑 Regular User — Or you could be a regular user who just seeks entertainment from negative things
Sometimes everything looks like sunshine and rainbows in the comments. This just helps answer the question, is that really the full story?
Would love to hear how others look for criticism. Do you actively search for it, or do you feel it is hard to find?
Great idea! Must be useful to see realistic comments. 👍🏻
@pasha_tseluyko you mean not useful to see realistic comments?
"totally misleading" comment as u see in one of images up,you think its good idea to remove it?
OnlyHate
@pasha_tseluyko @srkorwho Appreciate the comments. Just to clarify, OnlyHate doesn’t remove comments like “totally misleading”, it surfaces them. The goal is to make critical feedback easier to find when it’s usually buried under praise.
Nothing is deleted or censored, and there’s a sensitivity slider so you can control how strict the filtering is. It’s simply a different way/perspective of viewing the same comment section.
Congrats on the launch - this is a bold and very opinionated take on feedback consumption. I like the idea of intentionally surfacing critical comments to cut through noise and false validation. For creators who actually want to improve, this could be surprisingly useful. Curious how you’re thinking about context so constructive criticism isn’t lost alongside pure trolling.
OnlyHate
@vik_sh Thanks, Viktor. That’s a great point and honestly one of the core tensions I’ve been thinking about.
Right now, OnlyHate is intentionally opinionated in that it prioritizes visibility of criticism over comfort. The goal isn’t to treat all negative comments as equally valuable, but to surface them so creators can decide what’s signal and what’s noise. Constructive criticism and low-effort trolling often get grouped together in default comment sorting, and I wanted to flip that dynamic.
Context is something I’m actively exploring next. Things like recurring themes, frequency of similar complaints, and sentiment strength can help separate useful criticism from pure trolling without hiding either by default. The idea is to give creators more control over how they interpret feedback, not to make that decision for them.
Really appreciate you calling that out. Feedback like this is exactly what helps shape where the product goes next.
OnlyHate
@joshua_k1 That’s a fair point. The name is intentionally provocative, but the product itself is about surfacing criticism for visibility, not promoting hate or harassment.
interesting idea. Sometimes "negative" feedback can be just as noisy as praise. I like to take it all in stride and listen to users to know where/when I should lean in/ and where I should maybe back off. How's the product been received so far?
OnlyHate
@nel_lansley Appreciate that perspective, and I agree that negative feedback needs context to be useful. So far the reception’s been positive, especially from creators using it as a temporary lens to spot recurring issues rather than a default view. I’m also getting a lot of requests for support on other platforms like Facebook and X, as well as additional language support, which are the next areas I’m exploring.
@staniellg very cool. I can 100% see the value prop from creators who deal with unproductive negative feedback. Best of luck to you