Personalization menus can grow too quickly. Names, dates, icons, gift messages, and material choices all sound attractive, but each option adds a new approval problem if the sample photos are not clear yet.

For a small shop watching AntBelt G1, a better first step is to keep the menu narrow. Pick one blank, one artwork zone, and one buyer-facing proof format. Then use sample photos to decide whether the menu should expand.

This does not require a claim about final throughput, material guarantees, or order volume. It is simply a practical way to avoid offering more options than the current sample record can support.

The AntBelt update archive at /updates/ can help sellers think in small, reviewable workflow steps before writing a public offer.

Follow the AntBelt G1 Kickstarter page for the launch reminder, reward details, and current campaign information: