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bibdle/todo.md
2025-12-25 00:56:49 -05:00

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todo

  • Difficulty levels

  • difficult mode (guess old or new testament, first try only)

  • impossible mode (1894 scrivener koine greek NT or some hebrew version for OT) three guesses only

  • "login to see your stats, unlock practice mode, and more"

  • Practice mode: Unlimited verses

  • Create public or private leaderboards

  • Passport book with badges:

    • Guess each Gospel first try
    • "Guessed all Gospels", "Perfect week", "Old Testament expert"
    • Theologian: Guess each book first try
  • instructions

places to send

  • linkedin post
  • ocf discord server
  • nick makiej

About this game

As a young camper at the Metropolis of Boston Camp, I remember His Eminence Metropolitan Methodios would visit every Sunday. He was often surrounded by important people for his entire time there, so I never gathered the courage to introduce myself, but his homilies during Liturgy always stood out to me. In some ways, they differed year after year, but a majority of his message remained strikingly familiar. "Take ten minutes to read the Bible every day," he asked. "Just ten minutes. Go somewhere quiet, turn off the TV (then iPod, then cell phone), and read in peace and quiet."

Despite His Eminence's otherwise cool and intimidating aura, it never came across as a demand or an order. Yet it wasn't exactly polite either. It sounded closer to pleading... like to his core, he knew how important it was, what he was asking — how important it would be for our lives.

I never really followed through with what he asked. The Metropolis of Boston Camp was my true home throughout my childhood, teenage years, and young adulthood. Leaving it every summer, and bringing the lessons, experiences, and faith I'd gained over the weeks and years home to the monotony of home remains the challenge of my life so far.

I created Bibdle from a combination of two things. The first is my lifelong desire to create experiences that people love; to create experiences that bring people together. The second is my guilt for never reading the Bible at home like Metropolitan Methodios asked. I hope it helps you with this challenge as much as it's helped me!


done

december 23rd

  • switched to local copy of NKJV
  • improved stats layout
  • general UI improvements
  • added greek bible for future challenges

december 22nd

  • hovering or tapping BIBDLE fades in and out to BIBLE DAILY

december 21st

  • better guess emoji consistency (removed ambiguous red squares)
  • HH:MM until next verse
  • triodion font for verse (PT Serif)
  • custom verses for Christmas Eve and Christmas

before december 19th

  • improve design (uniform column widths on desktop)
  • moved to bibdle.com
  • v2: avg guesses per bible verse updating daily (on completion: avg. guesses: 6)
  • v2: you're the XXXth person to guess correctly today
  • metadata
  • favicon
  • site title
  • deploy

Goals for Bibdle

My inspiration for this game is very much centered in the Wordle story, where product design legend Josh Wardle created a fun word puzzle for him and his girlfriend. It was so fun that it spread around his immediate family like wildfire, getting to a point of around 90 consistent daily players for a long time before exploding. And of similar stories like Balatro, Bear Blog, and more.

The initial response to Bibdle has been strong. People like it AND quite a few actually come back to continue doing it.

But the question that has been getting to me: Is it fun enough? Is it novel enough? Is it challenging enough? Is it easy enough?

Is it enough?

How can I make it even better?

Reading: Designing Games by Tynan Sylvester