VOID
The Idea Validation Engine
Most startups don’t fail because they can’t build.
They fail because they build the wrong thing.
VOID exists to stop that.
What is VOID?
VOID is where ideas meet reality. It turns raw ideas and research signals into validated problem statements using real people, real experience, and real incentives.
How VOID Works (Founder Flow)
Enter Your Idea
You start with one thing: An idea or a problem you want to solve.
- You don’t need a pitch deck.
- You don’t need research.
- Just clarity on what you think matters.
Lock Intent with a Stake
You put real value behind the idea. This filters noise and attracts serious feedback.
- Your stake becomes the reward pool.
- Value for value.
Idea Goes Live
Your idea is published as a validation bounty.
- Community members don’t upvote opinions.
- They submit real problems they’ve personally faced.
- Pain, context, constraints—not vibes.
Receive Structured Insights
You get repeated patterns, clear problem language, and validation on what actually hurts.
- If the problem is real.
- Who feels it.
- Why it matters.
- Only then should you build.
Community Flow
Contribute Experience
Community members participate by submitting problems they’ve lived through, context founders can’t Google, and edge cases that kill weak ideas.
No fluff. No theory.
Get Rewarded for Signal
When a submission is accepted, contributors are rewarded directly. Value flows to people with real experience.
Paid for signal, not engagement.
Most validation tools ask
“Would you use this?”
VOID asks
“What problem did you actually live through?”
That single shift changes everything.
Who VOID Is For
Founders
- ✓ Validate before building
- ✓ Replace assumptions with evidence
- ✓ Build what people actually need
Builders & Operators
- ✓ Monetize real experience
- ✓ Influence what gets built
- ✓ Be rewarded for truth, not hype
VOID + Scriptonia
VOID validates the problem. Scriptonia builds the solution.
Once an idea is validated, it flows directly into Scriptonia’s context engine—where it’s turned into structured execution.
VOID doesn’t make ideas look good.
It makes bad ideas uncomfortable—early.
That’s the point.