The safest custom gift promise is the one that stays inside the tested frame. If a seller has only photographed a small tag, the first offer should not quietly expand into every possible object, placement, finish, and delivery promise.

A tested frame can be described in plain language: the style shown, the proof step, the review window, and the limits of what the shop is currently offering. That kind of copy helps customers understand the product without making the seller defend untested variations.

AntBelt G1 followers can use the same thinking while evaluating pre-launch samples. A visible tag or gift sample is useful evidence for layout and workflow, but it should not be stretched into broad material guarantees or final production claims.

For sellers, the practical next step is to make the first offer smaller, clearer, and easier to repeat. The result is a custom menu that sounds more trustworthy because it is tied to what has actually been checked.

Follow the AntBelt G1 Kickstarter page for the launch reminder and final reward details: