Custom order pages often become too broad too soon. A safer first version keeps options inside the evidence the seller already has: one blank type, one placement style, and wording that matches the proof photo.
This matters for AntBelt G1 because the campaign is still in the pre-launch period. Early samples can show practical workflow ideas, but they should not imply final throughput, every material behavior, or finished fulfillment promises.
A small shop can write order options as a checklist: what the buyer can customize, what the current sample shows, what needs approval, and what is not offered yet. That last line is useful because it protects the seller from accidental overpromising.
Once more samples are reviewed, the menu can expand. Until then, narrow options are easier to support and easier for customers to understand.
Follow the AntBelt G1 Kickstarter page for the launch reminder and final reward details:
