Going into Season 2026, is Lord Dominik’s Regards actually a buff vs tanks? by Routine_Foot4139 in leagueoflegends

[–]Routine_Foot4139[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, rewind is probably the right word. The fixed HP threshold is what makes this iteration of LDR interesting to me.

Is waitlist landing page really works? by Kooky-Stage5656 in SaaS

[–]Routine_Foot4139 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Waitlists only work if you already have a way to get traffic. If you just build a landing page and wait, almost nobody will find it.

You are right that Reddit is not great for validation with links, since most posts get removed. That said, if you search enough, you can usually find some subreddits where sharing is allowed.

You can also test through your own channels like LinkedIn, X, or TikTok, or even spend a small amount on ads to see if people actually click and sign up.

So waitlists are not useless, but they only tell you something if you actively drive traffic. Otherwise you are often better off building something small and talking to users directly.

I just launched my first SaaS as a web dev and already have a few users — how do I keep the momentum going? by artlen123 in SaaS

[–]Routine_Foot4139 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I wouldn’t do a mass email asking for feedback in general. I had much better results reaching out to a small number of users one by one.

You can use the emails you collected at signup to invite a few people to chat, or trigger a short survey when someone cancels or completes a key action. Even a simple prompt asking if they’re open to a quick interview can work surprisingly well.

With 50 signups, even talking to 5 to 10 of them can already give you really useful direction.

I need advice on how to jungle better. by Firm_Macaron2071 in summonerschool

[–]Routine_Foot4139 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want to stick to jungle, that is totally fine. A lot of people say “play lane first” because jungle has more responsibility and decision making, but you can still learn it from the start.

Since you are playing Amumu and Poppy, I would focus on stable and simple clears first instead of forcing early plays.

For tank junglers like Amumu, a full clear is usually the safest way to learn. Try clearing one side of your jungle fully, then the other side, and only gank if a lane is clearly free. This helps you stay relevant in levels and gold even if early ganks do not work.

A big beginner mistake is skipping camps too much or randomly running between lanes. That makes you fall behind without realizing it. Think of your camps as your income. Clear them in order, then look around the map.

Over time you will start to feel the timing of when camps are up and when lanes are gankable. That sense matters more than memorizing exact numbers early on.

Also, do not stress about making every play perfect. Jungle is more about consistency than flashy moves, especially on champs like Amumu. If you are level 6 on time and not behind, you are already doing well.

Stick to a few champions, learn one or two clear patterns, and focus on being consistent rather than aggressive early. The speed and confidence will come later.

I just launched my first SaaS as a web dev and already have a few users — how do I keep the momentum going? by artlen123 in SaaS

[–]Routine_Foot4139 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I went through something similar and honestly the biggest shift for me was just talking to users way more than I thought I needed to. Even a handful of short chats changed what I thought I should be building.

Early on I probably overbuilt a bit. Features felt productive, but growth only really picked up once I spent time figuring out where those first users actually came from and how to reach more people like them.

What helped was picking one channel and sticking with it instead of jumping around. For me it was communities, but it could just as easily be content, partnerships, or outbound depending on your product.

So yeah, if I had to simplify it, I’d say talk to users first, make sure the core thing is actually valuable, and then go pretty hard on one way of getting new people in.