The Landing Page Leaderboard

Every page below was graded by the same engine, against the same 31 principles, with zero human edits. Click any row for the full teardown β€” free.

#PageVerdictScore
1 usefathom.com Google Analytics hate-mail turned SaaS β€” solid product, but the page screams 'we're not Google' louder than 'here's why you'll love us'. 68
2 plausible.io Privacy-first analytics with real numbers and real customers β€” but the nav has more items than a Cheesecake Factory menu. 62
3 hey.com HEY screams personality but whispers price β€” bold manifesto, invisible numbers, and a CTA soup that dilutes the punch. 62
4 linear.app Linear's landing page is a beautiful product brochure that forgets to sell anything β€” spec-heavy, human-light, number-free. 62
5 gumroad.com Gumroad tells a great story but forgets to tell you what to click, what it costs, or why it's different from 2015. 58
6 basecamp.com A grandpa teaching a masterclass β€” wise, proven, and accidentally hiding the price tag behind the rocking chair. 58
7 supabase.com A feature buffet for developers that sells everything and therefore sells nothing β€” 'Build in a weekend' slaps though. 58
8 posthog.com A dev tool that's genuinely fun to read but forgets the landing page's job is to convert, not entertain. 58
9 raycast.com A keyboard launcher with 78 colors, 7 CTAs, and a headline so vague it could sell anything from a TV remote to a teleporter. 55
10 bannerbear.com A developer API that automates itself into obscurity with a headline so vague it could sell anything. 52
11 senja.io A testimonial tool that forgot to use its own advice: vague copy, 22 colors, free plan, no prices in nav. 52
12 typefully.com A solid social scheduler that sells features like a brochure, not a dream β€” and hides pricing like it's embarrassed. 52
13 beehiiv.com beehiiv wants to be everything to everyone, and its landing page says almost nothing to anyone. 52
14 lemonsqueezy.com A lemon-themed MoR platform with an identity crisis β€” nav has 15 items, CTAs have 12 flavors, and 'easy peasy' does a lot of heavy lifting. 52
15 railway.com Ship software peacefully β€” on a page that ships 51 colors and zero prices. Chaotic irony. 52
16 cal.com 'The better way to schedule meetings' β€” Calendly said that in 2013, and you're still saying it in 2025. 52
17 stripe.com Stripe.de: beautiful infrastructure for giants, graded like a startupβ€”45 colors, no price, no founder, no mercy. 52
18 vercel.com Vercel's homepage is a gorgeous product catalog that forgot to close the sale β€” 28 colors, 20 CTAs, zero prices visible. 48
19 superhuman.com A $30/month email app that bought Grammarly and Coda, then forgot to explain why you should care. 41
20 figma.com A Swiss Army knife dressed as a landing page β€” 9 products, 24 colors, zero prices, and one H1 that says nothing. 41
21 testimonial.to 9 words of visible text and zero H1s β€” this page loaded like a ghost town during a blackout. 18

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