Hey IH đź‘‹
threewords.me is a simple web experiment where anything can be described in exactly three words.
Words, titles, people, events, brands, cities, trends — every entry has one rule: keep it to three words. Other users can browse topics, upvote the best descriptions, and add their own.
The format feels like a minimal, global take on dictionary/forum culture. Instead of long definitions or comments, the challenge is to make something short, sharp, funny, poetic, or strangely accurate.
A few examples:
coffee → bitter morning fuel
New York → loud beautiful chaos
Apple → polished expensive desire
life → brief strange ride
It's a UGC product, so it's only fun when there are people — the classic cold-start problem. That's where I'd love your input:
What worked for you to get the first real users for a community/UGC product?
Would you focus on a single niche first (only movies, only brands, etc.) instead of "describe anything"?
What would make this more shareable? I'm considering shareable image cards of three-word answers.
And honestly — could this dictionary-style format work globally, or is the three-word limit too niche?
Brutally honest feedback welcome. Site: https://threewords.me
It's really cool!
What about adding a section for emojis? like describe anything with 3 or 1 emoji, sometimes when creating UI or designing something I need some sort of way to abstract something in less words, it could be a funcion, naming some stuff or when using icon button sometimes is hard to get the right one that fits correclty based on the context
This is such a great idea, and honestly the dev/design use case you described hadn’t crossed my mind at all — but it makes total sense. When you’re hunting for the right icon or trying to abstract a function name, having a crowd-sourced “emoji consensus” for a concept could be genuinely useful.
The 3-emoji format especially feels like a natural extension of the three-words mechanic — same constraint-based thinking, different medium. I’m adding this to the roadmap. Thanks for the push!