Launching today
Product Front

Product Front

A place to get discovered faster and discover new products

45 followers

A visibility-first discovery platform built to put your product in front page. Tired of your launch getting buried? Our streamlined UI/UX design and weekly relaunch feature ensure your product gets a higher chance to be visible on screen without users needing to scroll for miles, Whether you’re a curator hunting for the next big tool or a solopreneur looking for those crucial first users, we level the playing field. No "top 5" paywalls—just pure discovery for makers who are just getting started.
Product Front gallery image
Product Front gallery image
Product Front gallery image
Product Front gallery image
Product Front gallery image
Free
Launch tags:SalesMarketingGrowth Hacks
Launch Team / Built With
Anima - OnBrand Vibe Coding
Design-aware AI for modern product teams.
Promoted

What do you think? …

Kim Benedict
Maker
📌

Hello Product Hunt 👋

The Problem
We’ve all been there. You spend months caffeinating your way through code, finally hitting that "Launch" button on Product Hunt, BetaList, or Peerlist with your heart in your throat. You’re ready for the world to see your masterpiece.

But then, reality sets in.

These platforms have become linear graveyards. Most only showcase the "Top 5" at first glance. If your product doesn't catch the initial morning wave, it's buried under a "See More" button, requiring users to scroll through a list of 100+ competitors.

Let’s be honest: if you aren't in the Top 20, you’re essentially invisible. Your hard work is relegated to the digital basement, hidden beneath a mountain of noise.

To make matters worse, it's increasingly becoming a "pay-to-win" game. * Ad Dominance: Paid placements now occupy 30–40% of the prime screen real estate.

Small startups and solo makers—the very heartbeat of this community—are being squeezed out.
How do you find your first 100 users when you don't have a $1,000 ad budget just to be seen?

The Solution
I didn’t build another directory; I built a stage where the spotlight actually moves. Product Front is a discovery platform designed to stop the "scroll-past" culture and give every founder a fighting chance from the second the page loads.

Every Pixel is a Chance to Be Seen
On most platforms, if you aren't #1, you're nobody. We changed the geometry of discovery:

The Landscape Grid: Instead of a suffocating vertical list, our desktop layout presents 28 products at once. No scrolling, no "See More," no friction. Just 28 dreams getting the eyeballs they deserve.

Quality over Chaos: We cap daily launches at 28 slots. By curing the "100-product fatigue," we ensure that every visitor who lands on our page actually has the mental space to care about your work.

The Smart Weekly Re-launch: Our algorithm lets you launch weekly. But here’s the magic: if a user has already seen your product, we hide it from them and show them something new. This keeps the feed a "treasure hunt" for users while giving you multiple shots at finding your "100 true fans."

Experience the "Snap"
We’ve engineered the browsing experience to fight the "False Bottom" effect—that moment a user thinks they’ve seen it all and leaves.

Desktop Scroll-Snap: One flick of the wrist perfectly aligns the next 28 products. In just two seconds, a user has seen 56 products with zero "fidgety" scrolling.

The Mobile "Peek-a-Boo": On phones, we show a tiny sliver of the next product. This subtle visual nudge signals to the brain that there is more to discover, turning a passive scroll into an active journey.

Why Product Front?
Because you didn’t spend hundreds of hours building a product just to have it buried under a "Promoted" ad or lost in a 100-item list.

Product Front is for the indie hackers, the solo dreamers, and the small teams tired of the pay-to-win game. We’ve fixed the visibility problem so you can focus on what matters: building something great.

We believe the best products should win based on innovation, not the size of their marketing wallet. It’s time to level the playing field for the makers who are just getting started.

Linjing Jiang
Very cool! I’m curious, how is Product Front different from Product Hunt? With so many products launching, how do you ensure each one gets enough visibility and attention?
Kim Benedict

Great questions, @linjing The biggest difference is that Product Hunt is a vertical race, while Product Front is a landscape stage.

Here’s how I ensure visibility:

The 28-Slot Cap: Unlike the endless vertical lists on Product Hunt where you get buried if you aren't in the top 5, we cap daily launches at 28. This cures "product fatigue" and ensures every visitor actually has the mental space to see your work.

Landscape Grid vs. Vertical Scroll: Our desktop layout shows all 28 products at once. No scrolling, no "See More," and no friction. Every pixel is designed to give you a fighting chance the second the page loads.

The Smart Re-launch: If a user has already seen your product, our algorithm hides it from them and shows them something new. This keeps the feed a "treasure hunt" for users while giving you multiple shots at finding your "100 true fans."

Essentially, I’ve traded the "pay-to-win" and "scroll-past" culture for a layout where everyone gets the spotlight.

Any feedback from you will help improving the product. 🙏

Animesh

Just checked and signed up on Product Front

Really liked the onboarding and overall UX

Congrats on the launch @kim_ben_g !

Kim Benedict

Thank you for your support @theanimeshs 🙏

As a solo maker preparing to launch my first product, this resonates hard. The anxiety of "what if I don't crack the Top 10 and nobody ever sees it" is real. The idea that you get multiple weekly shots at finding your audience instead of one do-or-die day is genuinely appealing.

Curious about the discovery side though: how are you planning to drive traffic to Product Front itself? The chicken-and-egg problem with discovery platforms is brutal, makers won't submit without an audience, and users won't come without good products. What's your strategy for the early days?