
Final Commit
The digital graveyard for startups
74 followers
The digital graveyard for startups
74 followers
In the age of fast shipping and micro-SaaS, countless startups die post MVP — no spotlight, no closure, just a domain left behind. Final Commit is a digital graveyard for those projects: a space to honor the build, share the journey, and be remembered.




This is such a unique and much-needed idea. So many MVPs vanish without a trace — this gives them dignity, memory, and maybe even inspiration for others. Love the concept of honoring the journey, not just the success.
Left a tribute for one of my early failed ideas. Felt weirdly good. If you’ve ever shipped something that didn’t work — this is for you.
Loved this idea! So many great projects just vanish, this gives them a proper goodbye & closure. Feels oddly comforting
We have heard enough startup success stories, and it's equally important to understand why some companies failed, why they couldn't make it, what they could have done better, what did their competitor who thrived did different. Chanakya said to learn from other's mistake so that you don't commit the same, thus it's a perfect opportunity for aspiring and current entrepreneurs to learn from those who couldn't make it and make sure they avoid those mistakes.
At the same time it's time for those entrepreneurs who struggled, did everything possible, gave their all in, to share their stories and wisdom.
This hits different, so many of us move on without reflecting. Bookmarked and shared
Dynamics
Brilliant concept. This addresses a real, often unspoken, pain point for founders by providing a space for closure and reflection. Honoring the journey, not just the outcome, is so important. Kudos for building this.
@isauravwagh Thank you so much — that really means a lot.
We’ve all felt that quiet, unspoken weight when a project ends.
Final Commit was born from those moments — to give them some kind of dignity and space to breathe.
Appreciate you seeing the heart behind it.
This feels so needed. Startups fail quietly every day, but the effort behind them deserves to be remembered. Submitting mine now.