Launched this week

Ultra-Light PHP Starter Ki
Zero-dependency PHP boilerplate with Clean Architecture
7 followers
Zero-dependency PHP boilerplate with Clean Architecture
7 followers
The ultimate production-ready boilerplate: 100% Native PHP & 0 dependencies. Built with strict Clean Architecture, it includes a dual-engine mailer (native + custom socket SMTP), a custom CSS-animated Dark Mode toggle (no white flash), bulletproof security (CSRF, Honeypot), and sleek UI components. Perfect for indie hackers and freelancers who want to ship fast, clean, and secure web projects without the bloat of massive frameworks.





Hey hunters! 👋
Tired of installing massive 50MB frameworks just to build a simple landing page, a micro-SaaS, or a fast client website?
We built the Ultra-Light PHP Starter Kit to solve exactly that. It's a production-ready boilerplate with 100% Native PHP and 0 external dependencies, strictly organized under Clean Architecture.
🔥 What's inside:
- Strict Clean Architecture decoupling your Domain & Use Cases from Infrastructure
- Dual-Engine Mailer (Switch instantly between native mail() and raw socket SMTP)
- Flawless Animated Dark Mode with system preference detection & ZERO white flash
- Bulletproof security (CSRF with TTL, anti-spam Honeypot, HTML sanitization)
- Premium "Luxury" CSS component library (Buttons, grids, cards)
- Essential developer workflow (Automated deploy.sh & server check.php tools)
Stop wasting hours setting up your base code. Build clean, ship fast, and save your time!
Would love to hear your feedback! 🚀
Spent an hour poking around the structure and really liked how the no-flash dark mode toggle is handled with pure CSS, such a small thing but so easy to get wrong otherwise.
@yeliz950491 Thanks a lot for taking the time to look! Really glad you noticed the CSS dark mode toggle. Getting rid of that annoying white flash without adding layout shifts or heavy JS execution was exactly the goal. Appreciate the feedback, it means a lot coming from someone who pays attention to those details!
Genuinely curious about something: how does the custom socket SMTP engine actually compare to something like PHPMailer or Symfony Mailer in terms of reliability with bigger providers like Gmail or Outlook?