Web MVP aligned to the Dream.Do product spec

Discover on web, unlock with confidence, and own your music in Dream.Do.

Dream.Do is becoming a real multi-page music product, not a one-page promo site. Artist pages, release pages, track previews, hosted checkout, and clean handoff into the app now work together as one ownership-aware experience.

This front door should tell the story clearly, discover artists, preview music, unlock on web, then keep the real owned listening experience inside the app.

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Featured artists

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Latest releases

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Preview-ready tracks

Why this feels better

Direct artist identity

Profiles, releases, and tracks now come from live Dream.Do data instead of placeholder content.

Commerce-ready pages

Hosted checkout is connected to products so paid unlock flows can feel native, not bolted on.

Ownership-aware foundation

The web layer is being shaped around entitlements, not one-off downloads or vague access promises.

Current site shape

A real platform surface, not a brochure

Live now
  • • Discovery pages for artists, releases, and tracks
  • • Hosted checkout with clearer ownership state transitions
  • • Trust, support, and policy surfaces for launch credibility
  • • Web-to-app handoff routes and share-friendly URLs

Discover artists

Profiles that carry artist identity, trust, and community presence.

Open section →

How Dream.Do works

See the full product loop from discovery to checkout to owned listening in the app.

Open section →

For artists

Understand the direct-release model, artist-first monetization, and where this platform is heading.

Open section →

Artist identity first

Public artist pages should feel credible enough to share, not like placeholders around a payment widget.

Unlocks with clear state

The site now explains locked, pending, and owned states so people know exactly what changes after payment.

App handoff by design

Dream.Do uses the web for discovery and conversion, then hands people back into the app where ownership and listening belong.

Artists

Featured creators with real presence

Artist pages should feel like real profiles in the product, not detached marketing cards.

Releases

Drops designed to feel collectible

The MVP wants fans to preview music, unlock on web, and listen in app. These pages should support that clearly.

Tracks

Preview-ready songs with clearer intent

Preview-first rows make it easier to browse the catalog and understand what can be opened, sampled, or unlocked.

Carrier

Hip Hop

3:04Preview live

Afterhours

Hip Hop

3:41Preview live

Nightshift

Hip Hop

3:20Preview live

Late Block

Hip Hop

3:57Preview live

Higher Ground

Gospel / R&B

3:53Preview live

Testify

Soul

3:11Preview live