A strong-looking mark can be useful, but it is not the same thing as full material confidence. A contrast note describes what is visible in one sample. Material confidence needs more context: blank source, setup, design size, inspection conditions, and repeat checks.

AntBelt G1 sample content should keep those ideas separate. A sample board can help makers compare visibility, layout, and basic review questions. It should not be used to promise final performance across every future blank.

Good sample notes use plain language:

  1. What looked clear.
  2. What looked weak.
  3. What changed from the previous test.
  4. What needs another sample.

This is especially useful for backers and first-time users because it shows how a result can be reviewed without turning into an exaggerated claim. It also makes the next test more focused.

If a sample looks promising, save it as a reference, not a final verdict. The next decision should come from a repeatable record, not from one attractive photo.

For more AntBelt updates, see /updates/.

Back AntBelt G1 on the official Kickstarter page to review current reward details and campaign updates: