Devlog: March 8, 2026
Sunday was a broad execution day: strategy and marketing infrastructure got sharper, GameLegend kept charging through product and content work, Kira continued its interop push, and MrPhilGames.com picked up two timely blog posts.
Marketing
A new marketing stack landed, including blog-post and twitter skills, plus supporting plan and project configuration work. That’s less flashy than a product feature, but strategically useful: it tightens the machinery around publishing and promotion so future marketing work can happen with less friction.
GameLegend
GameLegend was the clear center of gravity for the day.
The project pushed through a major platform build-out spanning product, auth, content, and presentation. Clerk replaced NextAuth, auth was refactored toward a client-side model that fits static generation better, and the public-facing experience improved with a landing page, OG tags, dark mode design tokens, loading skeletons, error boundaries, and better empty states.
At the same time, the core recommendation and curation vision kept expanding. Community curation systems arrived with submissions, moderation, reputation, and consensus mechanics, while the personal taste DNA system gained match scores and a radar chart visualization. Supporting content also moved in lockstep, with four launch blog posts added and planning documents updated or retired as phases completed.
Overall, this reads like a project moving from "interesting concept" toward a more complete, presentable, and marketable product.
Kira
Kira stayed focused on Klar interop and the surrounding build pipeline.
Phase 4 build-system integration landed with exports and manifest support, while Phase 3 string and memory interop work continued underneath it. Follow-up commits addressed QA findings and review feedback, which is exactly what you want to see after a deep systems feature lands: implementation first, then fast stabilization.
There was also a merge commit wrapping part of that work up, suggesting the interop effort is moving through review and consolidation rather than living as a long-running side branch forever.
MrPhilGames.com
The site itself gained two new blog posts: one on Block's layoffs and what they signal for games, and another on why game discovery is the real AI bet.
That’s a good fit for the broader pattern of the day. While other repos handled tooling and product execution, MrPhilGames.com continued building the public narrative layer around games, strategy, and industry direction.