No tutorials. No toy projects. Every day for a month, you get a real challenge — build a Telegram bot, a payments app, a SaaS product — and you ship it before midnight. Claude writes the code. You make the decisions. Instructors grade your work.
Most people who want to learn to code spend months watching tutorials and never build anything real. This is the opposite. Day 1, you ship. Day 2, you ship again. By Day 9, you've built a static site, a single-page app, a Telegram bot, a browser extension, and a CLI tool — and you've never written a line of code by hand.
Here's the secret: Claude does the coding. You do the thinking.
You describe what you want. Claude builds it. You test it, tweak it, break it, fix it, and ship it. Along the way, you absorb how code works — not from a textbook, but from building 27 real things.
This is your day.
Every day. For 27 days.
Multiply this by 27.
That's the bootcamp.
Each star is a project. Click any star to explore.
Perfect. That's the point. Claude handles the syntax — you handle the ideas. By Day 27, you'll have shipped more projects than most CS graduates.
You know enough to start but not enough to ship. This bootcamp forces you to finish. Every. Single. Day. The streak mechanic, peer reviews, and public leaderboard are designed to get you past "almost done."
In 27 days you'll have a Telegram bot, a Chrome extension, a full-stack app, a SaaS product, and an AI agent — all deployed, all linkable.
[2-3 sentences about why they built this bootcamp.]
Every seat that fills is one fewer spot. No waitlist, no second chances for Batch 1.