Your friends say “looks great.” Your colleagues say “nice work.” But you ship it and nobody uses it. Sound familiar? That's why RoastMyWork exists.
Most feedback loops are broken. People are too polite to say what they really think, or too close to the work to see it clearly. You share your landing page in a Discord server and get three fire emojis. You post your side project on Twitter and get retweets from people who never looked at it.
Meanwhile, the real problems go unnoticed — the confusing UX, the weak value proposition, the code architecture that will hurt you in six months. RoastMyWork creates a space where anonymous, honest feedback is not just allowed — it's the entire point.
You submit your work — code, design, landing page, business idea, pitch deck — and the community roasts it. No sugarcoating. No politics. Just honest people telling you what actually needs to improve. Roasters stay anonymous, which means they can say what they actually think without worrying about offending you.
When roasters can't be identified, they say what they actually think. Anonymity isn't a loophole — it's a feature.
Real humans reviewing real work. No AI-generated fluff, no engagement-bait rankings — just people helping people improve.
There's a difference between a roast and an attack. We enforce feedback that critiques the work, not the person.
The goal isn't to make you feel bad — it's to give you the clarity to ship work you're actually proud of.
RoastMyWork was built by Khalil ur Rehman, a developer who got tired of shipping things into the void. It started as a personal tool to get better feedback on side projects and turned into a platform for anyone who wants the same thing.
The platform is in open beta. Features are being added based on what the community needs. If you have feedback — and you should, this is literally a feedback platform — reach out at khalilurrehman.it@gmail.com.
Submit your first piece of work for free. No credit card required.