I think the site should be formed around the top use cases. I think the book "don't make me think" is a wonderful guide to making websites usable.
1.) Download and install pygame 2.) Quick "what is pygame" 3.) Documentation / Sample code 4.) Share user projects 5.) News I think the main landing page should probably have links to these and not much else. Maybe show top news 'below the fold.' Paul Vincent Craven On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 9:23 AM, Sam Bull <sam.hack...@sent.com> wrote: > On Tue, 2015-08-18 at 15:18 +0200, adam.hasv...@free.fr wrote: > > Sam, I think everything you are asking for is there under the first two > headers. > > I'm not seeing them... > > > Recent news on the front page. > > This is fine, front and centre. > > > Link to documentation and tutorials. > > There are a number of confusingly named headers, of which I have no idea > what I'm looking for. When arriving on the home page, I want to see a > docs link in the header, rather than have to decipher that I need the > 'learn' header, and then finding the link somewhere in paragraph of > text. > > > Link to suggested libraries and utilities to use with Pygame. > > I'm not seeing this anywhere. On the old website, this was also not easy > enough to find, nor was the page well maintained/formatted. > > > Link to page where I can browse interesting Pygame projects. > > Recent releases are shown on the home page. I instinctively expect the > header of that to be a link to the full page where I'll be able to > browse projects. But, it is not a link, and I don't see a place to > browse projects. > > > Link to support locations (mailing list, bug tracker, source > > code etc.) > > Again, not finding this. The best I see is recent issues and commits. > Again this is not useful to me, and I expect clicking the header to take > me to the actual source and bug tracker sites, but they don't. >