View Issue Details
| ID | Project | Category | View Status | Date Submitted | Last Update |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0008933 | 30XX Bugs | General | public | 2026-07-03 09:54 | 2026-07-03 09:54 |
| Reporter | anonymous | Assigned To | |||
| Priority | normal | Severity | block | Reproducibility | always |
| Status | new | Resolution | open | ||
| Summary | 0008933: A UX Homework Approach to Website Review That Opened New Perspectives | ||||
| Description | When I started my user experience course, our instructor gave us a simple assignment: pick any public website and evaluate it as if we were responsible for improving it. At first, I assumed the task would mostly involve commenting on colors and typography. Instead, I quickly realized that good user experience has far more to do with helping people accomplish their goals than creating something visually impressive. The first thing I examined was navigation. I asked myself a simple question: if I were visiting this website for the first time, could I predict where different types of information would be located? Surprisingly, that question revealed quite a lot. Websites with logical menus and clearly labeled sections immediately feel less intimidating because visitors spend their time reading instead of figuring out where to click next. I found myself appreciating designs that prioritized clarity over complexity. Next, I looked at how the content was organized. Good information architecture isn't something most users consciously notice, but they certainly notice when it's missing. Pages that follow a consistent structure make it easier to understand relationships between topics. I paid attention to whether related information was grouped together, whether important pages were easy to reach, and whether the website encouraged natural exploration instead of forcing users to repeatedly return to the homepage. I also tested the site on both my laptop and my phone. Responsive design has become one of the most important aspects of modern web development because people constantly switch between devices throughout the day. On smaller screens, I looked for readable text, buttons that were easy to tap, and menus that remained straightforward to use. A responsive website shouldn't feel like a simplified version of the desktop experience—it should feel intentionally designed for whichever device someone happens to be using. Accessibility became another area I hadn't thought much about before this assignment. I started noticing heading structures, text contrast, spacing between interactive elements, and whether pages seemed easy to read without unnecessary distractions. Many accessibility improvements benefit everyone, not just users with disabilities. Larger touch targets, clearer typography, and consistent layouts make browsing smoother for virtually every visitor. | ||||
| Steps To Reproduce | Finally, I reflected on what makes a website feel trustworthy. It wasn't flashy graphics or elaborate animations. Instead, it was consistency. Repeated navigation patterns, up-to-date information, clearly written content, and a logical page structure all contributed to a sense of professionalism. Even small details, like avoiding broken links or maintaining consistent terminology, influenced my overall impression of the site. Lucky88 PH Official Website: https://lucky88-ph.vip/ | ||||
| Additional Information | Completing this exercise changed how I browse the internet. I still appreciate attractive design, but now I pay much closer attention to the experience behind it. The best websites aren't necessarily the ones with the most advanced features—they're the ones that quietly remove obstacles, communicate clearly, and help visitors find what they need without making them think twice about how the website works. That's a lesson I'll probably carry into every website I evaluate in the future. | ||||
| Tags | accessibility , information architecture , lucky88-ph.vip | ||||
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