CRISP Score 1/5 - Failing
The lowest-scoring SaaS websites - the anti-patterns gallery. Learn what not to do.
39 sites scored and annotated
Zellify
Zellify.app presents a critical accessibility failure at the point of evaluation, serving a Cloudflare bot-protection block page to all incoming visitors rather than any product experience. This configuration — whether intentional or misconfigured — represents a significant funnel breakdown, as prospective users encounter a rejection message before any brand or product impression can be made. The design outcome here is entirely governed by Cloudflare's generic error template, offering no insight into the product's actual design language or UX intent.
Usemultiplier
The site currently presents nothing more than a CloudFront 403 error page, indicating a misconfiguration or traffic-related block rather than an intentional design. There is no design, UX, or product content to analyze in its current state. Visitors arriving at this URL encounter a dead end with no fallback messaging, brand identity, or redirect — a significant availability and credibility risk for a SaaS product.
Tolahq
The tolahq.com domain currently returns a Cloudflare Error 1000 caused by a DNS misconfiguration pointing to a prohibited IP address, rendering the site completely inaccessible to visitors. There is no design, product content, or user experience to evaluate, as every dimension of the CRISP framework is blocked at the infrastructure level. Until the DNS A records are corrected within Cloudflare, the site presents only a technical error page with no brand or product presence.
Tensorstax
Tensorstax's public-facing entry point returns a bare 404 error, offering no fallback navigation, brand identity, or product signals to orient a first-time visitor. The absence of even a homepage link or search bar represents a critical UX failure at the top of the acquisition funnel. Without any recoverable content, the site scores at the minimum across all CRISP dimensions by default.
Supertape
Supertape's final web presence is a minimal shutdown notice that foregoes any design ambition in favor of brevity and closure. The page's only notable design choice is a gracious, human-toned farewell message paired with a soft referral to the team's next venture, XOXO. This wind-down page prioritizes dignity over salvaging commercial value, which is itself a deliberate editorial stance.
Supaglue
The supaglue.com domain has lapsed and is now listed for auction on GoDaddy, rendering the site a bare parking page devoid of any SaaS product experience. The absence of any original content, branding, or functionality makes meaningful UX evaluation impossible. This serves as a cautionary example of domain expiration erasing a product's entire public-facing presence.
Skiff
Skiff's current web presence is effectively a tombstone page, reduced to a single-column acquisition announcement with a footer of legacy navigation links. The design is starkly minimal by necessity rather than intent, stripping away all of the product's former privacy-first identity in favor of a transitional message. What is notable here is the absence of design as a signal itself — the page communicates finality through emptiness, with the only forward-looking element being a migration guide link for existing users.
Scrapps
Scrapps.ai currently resolves to a GoDaddy domain parking page, indicating the product has not yet launched or the domain is available for purchase. There is no design, branding, or product experience to evaluate at this time. Prospective users or investors searching for the product will find no evidence of its existence at this URL.
Risecalendar
Rise's final public page is a candid, emotionally transparent shutdown letter that foregoes all conventional SaaS marketing conventions in favor of raw founder storytelling. The design challenge here is unique: the site must serve as both a closure document for existing users and an unsolicited post-mortem for the broader startup community, which it handles with notable narrative depth but zero commercial utility. What makes this page notable is its deliberate rejection of spin—sharing funding figures, competitive failures, and internal regrets in a way that is rare and humanizing for a product company's public-facing page.
Respell
Respell's current web presence is a tombstone page — a founder-authored acquisition announcement that effectively closes the product loop rather than serving as a commercial SaaS interface. The page is notable for its candid, personal tone that prioritizes customer gratitude and mission storytelling over any transactional design intent. As a design artifact, it represents the rare case where a SaaS site's primary UX job is graceful offboarding rather than conversion.
Quicklnk
Quicklnk.com presents as a GoDaddy-parked domain rather than any live SaaS product, making meaningful UX or design evaluation impossible. The page's only design artifact is GoDaddy's default parking template, which prioritizes domain acquisition over any user need. This represents a pre-launch or lapsed state, with no discernible product identity, brand language, or interface to assess.
Polytrade
Polytrade's current web presence is a stripped-down 'coming soon' holding page that communicates an imminent rebrand toward AI-native functionality, but deliberately withholds all product detail. The stark, minimal aesthetic — featuring only a headline, a single paragraph, and an estimated arrival notice — creates intrigue at the cost of almost all evaluable UX signals. While the design choice may be intentional brand-building, it renders the site functionally opaque to any prospective user or analyst.
Paywithfuture
Paywithfuture.com appears to be in a pre-launch or placeholder state, offering visitors nothing more than a bare domain display and a privacy policy link. The absence of any headline, description, CTA, or brand identity represents a complete gap in product communication. This minimal footprint suggests the site is either parked, under construction, or has experienced a significant content rendering failure.
Com Papel
The site currently serves nothing more than a hosting platform's default deployment-paused interstitial, offering zero product context or brand identity to visitors. The page lacks any recovery UX such as a status link, contact option, or estimated restoration time, leaving users with no actionable path forward. This represents a critical availability gap that entirely eliminates any possibility of user acquisition or retention during the downtime period.
Merchlink
Merchlink.io currently presents visitors with a bare LiteSpeed Web Server 404 error page, indicating the site is either down, misconfigured, or the domain is unoccupied. There is no design, branding, or product content to evaluate, making any UX or product analysis impossible at this time. Prospective users or evaluators arriving at this URL would have no way to understand the product's purpose or value.
Maybe
Maybe.co presents evaluators and prospective users with a Cloudflare security block rather than its actual product experience, resulting in a complete failure across all UX dimensions. The barrier — likely triggered by automated crawling — effectively renders the public-facing surface invisible, which is a significant discovery and accessibility liability for a SaaS product dependent on organic acquisition. The design cannot be meaningfully assessed until bot-detection rules are tuned to permit standard browsing and evaluation traffic.
Kit (ConvertKit)
Kit.com's public-facing page is entirely obscured by a bot-detection interstitial at the time of evaluation, preventing any meaningful UX or design analysis. The only identifiable branding is the meta description labeling it 'The creator marketing platform,' suggesting a focus on creator-economy tools. The design experience, information architecture, and visual identity remain completely unassessable under these conditions.
June
June's final page is a gracefully written acquisition announcement that prioritizes emotional closure over product communication, reflecting the team's brand voice of warmth in an otherwise cold analytics category. The boarding pass visual metaphor — depicting a 'flight' from JUN to AMPL — is a memorable and on-brand design choice that encapsulates the transition with personality. As a live SaaS product page, however, it offers no evaluable UX for prospective customers, functioning instead as a dignified send-off to the community the team built over five years.
Joincabinet
The joincabinet.com site currently presents visitors with a CloudFront 403 error, indicating a misconfiguration or traffic-based block rather than any intentional design. There is no UI, content hierarchy, or brand presence to analyze. This represents a complete availability failure that would critically undermine user trust and acquisition for any SaaS product.
Joinbandit
Joinbandit.com presents as a Danish-language gambling affiliate site rather than a SaaS product, making CRISP framework evaluation largely inapplicable. The design centers on a casino comparison table with badge-style labels ('HOT OFFER,' 'TOP RATED') and long-form SEO copy targeting the 'casino uden ROFUS' keyword cluster, a pattern typical of low-trust affiliate content farms. The mismatch between the domain name and page content, combined with universally inflated '10/10' ratings sourced from tens of thousands of unverifiable reviews, signals a site optimized for search ranking rather than genuine user value.
Invoke
Invoke.com is currently a domain-for-sale parking page hosted through DomainEasy, presenting no SaaS product or digital service of any kind. The page's design is minimal and transactional, structured around a four-step purchase funnel with trust signals such as 'Safe and secure transactions' and 'Flexible payment plans.' There is no evidence of an existing product, making any UX or product analysis impossible against SaaS criteria.
Hellobonsai
Bonsai's public-facing page at the time of evaluation is fully obscured by a Cloudflare security verification screen, making any meaningful design or UX analysis impossible. The interstitial presents only a Ray ID and a generic bot-check message, which represents a significant accessibility and first-impression failure for prospective users. Until the verification layer resolves or is bypassed, the site communicates nothing about its product, brand identity, or target audience.
Gpt
NexusGPT's public-facing entry point is entirely a gated authentication screen, offering virtually no marketing or product surface to prospective users. The design foregoes the conventional SaaS pattern of a landing page with feature showcases in favor of an immediate sign-in wall, which may severely limit top-of-funnel conversion. The minimal UI — comprising a Google SSO button and email/password form — is clean but leaves the product's identity and differentiation almost entirely unexpressed.
Flowmonk
Flowmonk.com currently resolves to an Akamai edge server access denial, with the underlying URL suggesting the domain is listed for sale through GoDaddy's marketplace. There is no discernible design, product, or brand presence to evaluate. The domain appears to be either expired, transferred, or intentionally parked, leaving no SaaS experience of any kind for prospective users to encounter.
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