Whenwill

Whenwill CSS Design Awards Winner sites gallery

Description

Whenwill is built for the moment you realize you are tired of guessing. A trailer drops, a teaser poster hits social media, or a studio announces “coming soon,” and suddenly you are chasing half answers across forums, news posts, and comment threads. The whole point of Whenwill is to make that search feel simple again. It positions itself as a release date hub for upcoming entertainment, new games, new seasons of TV series, and new anime seasons, with a clear focus on the question everyone asks first: when is it actually coming out. What makes that promise valuable is that release dates are rarely as clean as fans want them to be. Sometimes you get a precise day, sometimes only a month, sometimes a vague year, and sometimes a title quietly shifts without a big announcement. A good release date site does more than repeat a date, it adds context so the date makes sense. That is where Whenwill’s “plot” angle becomes useful, because people are not only tracking schedules, they are trying to remember why a series matters, where the story left off, or what a new game is even about. When a site can pair a date with a quick, spoiler safe overview, it becomes a planning tool instead of a trivia page. It helps you decide what to watch next, what to pre order, what to wishlist, and what to keep an eye on, without having to open ten tabs. The concept also fits how fans actually behave online. People search in very specific ways, like “season 2 release date,” “next anime season,” “new episode schedule,” “next game release,” or “when is the new season coming.” Whenwill is aimed directly at those searches, which means it has the potential to pull consistent traffic from people who are ready to click, not just casually browsing. If the site continues to keep entries current, uses clear page titles, and structures each page around one specific title, it can naturally rank for long tail queries that spike whenever news breaks. For anyone who loves tracking what is coming next, Whenwill’s appeal is the same as a good calendar shared by a friend who never misses announcements. You stop scrolling random updates and start building a simple mental roadmap of what is worth waiting for. It turns anticipation into something organized, and for fans who follow games, TV, and anime at the same time, that alone can feel like a relief.

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Themes

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Score

Overall Score

8.65/10

Content

9.4

Creativity

8.3

Developer

8.2

Design

8.4

Mobile

8.7

Usability

8.9