A long custom product menu can look confident, but it also creates more promises to manage. A small shop can move faster by starting with a short menu: one product type, a few artwork choices, and clear proof language.
AntBelt G1 content should treat early examples as sample work, not a guarantee of final shop throughput or material behavior. That makes a short menu useful. It lets the seller test demand and presentation without implying that every material, finish, or order type is already validated.
The first menu can be simple: choose the blank, choose the message, approve the proof, then review the finished sample photo. Each step should have language the seller is comfortable honoring.
Once samples are reviewed, the menu can expand with better evidence. Until then, a small menu keeps the public promise easier to support.
Follow the AntBelt G1 Kickstarter page for the launch reminder and final reward details:
