Describe your idea once. Get five completely different takes back in under 3 minutes.
No design experience. No developer. No waiting. Just describe, choose, and ship.
One paragraph. Plain English. What the thing does, who it's for. That's literally it — no brief, no wireframe, no "target persona deck".
Five genuinely different landing pages — different angles, different visual layouts, different headlines. Not templates. Real design decisions, made by AI, for your specific idea.
Pick the page you like most and get two more refined versions — similar direction, sharper execution. Leave a comment like "keep the layout, push the copy harder" and go again. You stay in control without micromanaging. Most people land on their perfect page in 2–3 rounds.
Choose the page that clicks. Deploy at yourname.page5.dev — live, with a working signup form and real email capture. You'll know if people care before you write a single line of code.
Every angle, before you've had time to second-guess anything.
Like scrolling — just click. Deeper, not back to square one.
A comment is enough. Better pages come back automatically.
You can't spend two days on a page before knowing if the idea is worth building.
Different framings, real subdomains. The market picks the winner. You scale it.
Open Figma and stare at a blank canvas
45 minutes of rearranging rectangles while questioning your career choices.
Wait 3 weeks for a freelancer
$2,000 later, they hand you a design that completely misses the point.
Rewrite the headline 11 times
You change "Build" to "Create" to "Ship" and still feel like something's off.
2 weeks of dev time on maybe-nothing
Building a page for an idea you haven't validated yet. Expensive bet.
Launch. Hear nothing. Start over.
Crickets. And you don't even know if it was the headline, the design, or just the wrong audience — because you only had one version to test.
"I test every idea this way. I explore multiple positionings to see what actually gets signups — then I go all in on the winner."
Jan
Founder
Your idea deserves to be in front of real people — not stuck in a builder for another week.