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Forg (forg.to) centralizes verified builder/product profiles, syncs activity from multiple services, and helps you publish GitHub-driven updates.

Forg

What is Forg?

Forg (forg.to) is a platform for building in public. It’s designed to help project founders and builders share what they’re working on, ship launch updates, and connect with others who follow through on real progress.

Instead of treating progress like a one-off announcement, Forg centralizes a builder’s and project’s activity into verified profiles and a record of shipping history, so others can see a timeline of what’s been made and track growth over time.

Key Features

  • Verified Builder Profile: Create a centralized identity for your project that aggregates your tech stack and activity.
  • Aggregation Layer: Sync work and links from multiple platforms (listed examples include GitHub, Product Hunt, Dribbble, YouTube, Medium, Dev.to, LeetCode, and Codeforces) into one place.
  • Verified Product Profile: View a verified project page that consolidates your tech stack, repository activity, and links.
  • Creator Studio (GitHub → cross-posts): Automatically generate content updates from raw GitHub commits and schedule cross-posts to X, LinkedIn, and Bluesky.
  • Execution Log + Traction Verification: Provide a searchable history of shipped work and visualize growth with verified milestones (from first commit to first revenue, as described on the page).
  • Portfolio Widget: Embed a widget showing your shipping history directly on your landing page.
  • Forg Launchpad: Launch projects every Monday on Forg Launchpad to get early feedback from community members (the page specifically mentions the first 100 power users).

How to Use Forg

  1. Create a profile on Forg (the page presents “Create Profile forg.to/@you” as the starting point).
  2. Add your project details and connect/sync your accounts so your tech stack, repo activity, and links can be aggregated into your verified profiles.
  3. Use Creator Studio to turn GitHub commit activity into publishable updates, then schedule cross-posts to X, LinkedIn, and Bluesky.
  4. Publish updates and launches through the community and, if you’re looking for early feedback, use Forg Launchpad for Monday launches.
  5. Embed your Proof of Work: add the portfolio widget to your landing page and use your execution log as a searchable timeline.

Use Cases

  • Founder collecting early feedback: You’re preparing a new project and want structured opportunities to share updates and receive unfiltered feedback from early community members via Forg Launchpad.
  • Developer maintaining a consistent “build in public” presence: Instead of manually writing repeated posts, you generate updates from GitHub commits in Creator Studio and cross-post on a schedule.
  • Project team presenting credibility: You want a single verified view that aggregates your tech stack, repo activity, and shipping history so visitors and collaborators can quickly understand what you’re doing.
  • Investor or user proof-of-work review: You use the searchable execution log and traction milestones to show a verified timeline of shipped work and progress.
  • Landing-page portfolio without custom work: You embed the portfolio widget to display shipping history on your site, reducing the need to build and maintain custom status pages.

FAQ

Is Forg just a Product Hunt clone?

The FAQ on the page asks whether Forg is “just another Product Hunt clone,” but the provided content does not include the answer. Based on the page text, Forg focuses more broadly on a continuous process of building in public, including verified profiles and a shipping execution log.

Will Forg help me connect with people who follow real shipping?

Yes. The page describes Forg as a place to share what you’re working on, ship updates, launch projects, and connect with people who “actually get it,” and it includes community features like Launchpad and profile verification.

I’m not a developer. Can I use it?

The FAQ includes the question “I’m not a developer. Can I still use this?” but the provided content does not state an explicit answer. If you plan to use features like Creator Studio and tech-stack/repo aggregation, developer-centric inputs (for example, GitHub activity) may be relevant.

Can I delete embarrassing early posts?

The FAQ includes “Can I delete my embarrassing early posts?” but the provided content does not include a direct policy or explanation.

Will Forg sell my data?

The FAQ includes “Will you sell my data?” but no details are provided in the page content excerpt.

Alternatives

  • Microblogging (threads and short updates): Services like posting-focused social networks are better for quick updates, but they typically don’t provide verified project profiles, an execution log, or a single aggregated view of shipping history.
  • GitHub-centric marketing and documentation: Keeping updates in a README, changelog, or GitHub releases works well for code history, but it usually doesn’t include cross-post scheduling across social platforms or a community launch workflow.
  • Community launch platforms: Launch-focused communities help you announce new projects, but they may be less oriented toward maintaining a persistent, searchable record of shipping progress and traction milestones.