Nih syndrome Memes

Posts tagged with Nih syndrome

The Wheel Trap

The Wheel Trap
The impossible challenge for indie game devs isn't escaping the horror room—it's resisting the urge to code their own physics engine from scratch when a perfectly functional solution already exists! That creepy Jigsaw-like character knows exactly how to torture developers: put them in a room with a working component and watch them spend 72 hours implementing their own "slightly better" version instead of just using what works. The door to shipping their game has been open the whole time, but they're too busy optimizing wheel rotation algorithms to notice.

Reinvent The Wheel

Reinvent The Wheel
The ultimate horror movie for developers: Saw: Linux Edition . A twisted game where the villain doesn't force you to cut off your limb, but rather challenges your ability to resist creating your own implementation of something that already works perfectly fine. The door is unlocked, the solution exists, but that little voice in your head is screaming "I bet I could build a BETTER wheel with blackjack and memory leaks." The true psychological torture isn't the trap—it's our own compulsive need to write everything from scratch when a perfectly good npm package is sitting right there.

Not Invented Here? More Like Not Good Enough

Not Invented Here? More Like Not Good Enough
The eternal developer's paradox: rejecting perfectly functional apps because "someone else built it" while gleefully wasting entire weekends reinventing the wheel. Nothing screams "programmer" like spending 47 hours coding your own to-do app because the existing ones don't have that one obscure feature you'll use exactly once. The "deal-with-sunglasses" transformation represents that magical moment when you convince yourself that your janky homemade solution is somehow superior to the polished product with years of development and an actual QA team. It's not NIH syndrome—it's "professional growth"!

Every Time

Every Time
Ah, the classic programmer dichotomy! Top panel: Skeptical SpongeBob reluctantly using a pre-built math library like a normal person. Bottom panel: Maniacally happy SpongeBob diving into advanced mathematics and bitwise operations to build a "sUcKiEr VeRsIoN" from scratch. This is basically every developer who's ever thought "I could write this better" before spending 47 hours reinventing a wheel that's slightly more square than the original. The optimization obsession is real - we'd rather write 500 lines of bit-shifting wizardry than import numpy and call it a day.