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What I Learned From DEV Challenges About Winning and Community!

A developer shares how participating in DEV challenges taught them that the real value is not winning badges but becoming part of a supportive community. They realized that building a place where developers can discover and share projects is more important than individual wins. The experience shifted their goal from winning contests to creating lasting contributions and fostering community growth.

read2 min views1 publishedJun 21, 2026

I thought DEV Challenges were about winning.

What participating in DEV Challenges taught me.

A few months ago, I joined DEV.

I didn't know many people.

I wasn't well known.

I simply wanted to become a better developer.

Like many newcomers, I believed something very simple.

"If I can win a challenge, maybe that means I'm becoming a real developer."

So I kept participating.

Sometimes I built retro games.

Sometimes I experimented with AI.

Sometimes I simply challenged myself to finish something before the deadline.

Every challenge taught me something.

Every badge made me smile.

But after several months, I realized something unexpected.

The biggest prize wasn't the badge.

I started asking myself...

What happens after the contest ends?

The badge stays on my profile.

The project goes to GitHub.

Then...

What's next?

That question stayed with me for a long time.

Then I realized something.

I had been focusing on the contest.

But the real value wasn't the contest.

It was the community.

Without DEV...

I would never have discussed ideas with developers from around the world.

I would never have received reactions from people I had admired.

I would never have met developers with completely different ways of thinking.

The challenge wasn't just building software.

The challenge was becoming part of a community.

Something I had rarely experienced before.

Most communication happens inside companies.

DEV felt different.

It gave me a place to keep showing up.

To keep learning.

To keep improving.

That matters more than I realized.

The hardest part isn't building software.

This surprised me.

As I kept building apps, I realized something.

Building an app is difficult.

But building a place where people discover that app...

is much harder.

That's when I started appreciating communities like DEV even more.

Someone had to build this place.

Someone had to create a market where beginners and experienced developers could stand on the same stage.

That's an incredible achievement.

My goal changed.

When I started...

my goal was simple.

Win a challenge.

Now...

I still want to create great projects.

I still hope to win someday.

But that's no longer my biggest goal.

Now I want to build things that continue to matter after the contest ends.

Projects.

Ideas.

Discussions.

Communities.

To anyone joining DEV for the first time:

If you're here because you want to win... I understand.

That was me too.

But don't overlook something much bigger.

You're joining a community where people encourage each other, challenge each other, and grow together.

The badge may stay on your profile.

But the community stays with you.

I still don't know all the answers.

In fact...

I think I finally found the right question.

How can we create more places where independent developers can keep growing together?

I'd love to hear your thoughts.

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