REVIEWS / GENERAL / OWNER INSIGHTS
🦉 WE READ 661 OWNER COMMENTS
more reactive: what owners actually say
The sampled comments do not discuss a product called 'more reactive'; instead they cover three unrelated topics — a job-search organiser web app, a Ruby dependency-upgrade tool called Infield, and a Lemmy moderation incident about vegan cat diets — so no coherent owner-insight synthesis is possible.
What owners complain about
- Unusable input data COMMON
The 55 comments reference at least three distinct subjects (Lemmy community drama, a job-search tool, and a dependency-upgrade service), none of which is the product requested, making theme extraction unreliable.
- Pricing concerns (Infield) FEW
One commenter called the pricing 'steep for being a fancy changelog interpreter', indicating perceived cost-value mismatch.
- Feature gaps (job-search tool) SOME
Multiple users requested resume version tracking, interview email reminders, cover-letter management, and more businesslike colour scheme.
What owners love
- Clean, intuitive design (job-search tool)
Several Hacker News commenters called the job-search organiser 'clean', 'intuitive', 'elegant', and said it mirrored or improved on their own pen-and-paper or spreadsheet methods.
- Responsive developer (job-search tool)
One user noted the creator implemented a suggestion (links opening in new tab) within hours, and another reported getting hired while using the tool.
Surprising patterns
- The bulk of high-voted Lemmy comments discuss cat nutrition ethics and moderation transparency — entirely unrelated to any product purchase decision.
- Several job-search tool users explicitly questioned whether it justified existing beyond a spreadsheet, suggesting the value proposition is borderline for its audience.
WHO SHOULD SKIP IT
Anyone seeking insight on the product 'more reactive' should skip this report entirely, as the supplied comments do not reference that product.
Synthesised from 661 real owner comments across 5 platforms. Every point is grounded in the comments — no marketing, no AI guessing. How we do it →