Start with an open feed instead of a gate.
The first screen opens directly into necklace discovery under Collector Guest. Reviewers can inspect the main flow immediately and see how layered chains, pendant close-ups, and material-focused captions appear without creating an account. The feed is designed to surface collectible details, not generic trend cards, which keeps the product anchored to the necklace-specific community claim.
Save references into boards that remain tied to context.
Yexil uses collection boards as structured save spaces for pendant combinations, metal pairings, heirloom notes, and event-based layering references. Each board can keep together individual posts, comments, and wear observations so users understand why an item was saved instead of treating saved content as a loose folder without explanation.
Move from image-first discovery into discussion-ready detail.
Each necklace post expands into material notes, chain length context, comment threads, and related collector information. That detail surface is important for review because it shows the product as a discussion space around jewelry specifics rather than a one-way inspiration wall. The detail page is where comments and saves become part of the product’s core social loop.
Profiles focus on saved boards, published posts, and recurring preferences.
Collector profiles organize community output around saved boards, visible posts, and recognizable preferences such as pendant scale, metal finish, or layering rhythm. Reviewers can see that the profile is built for community browsing and follow-up discovery rather than personal planning or private catalog management.
Publishing is framed as contribution, not consultation.
The Post entry is for sharing a necklace photo, adding material notes, and capturing wear context that other collectors can discuss or save. This keeps the product grounded in community participation. Text, images, and optional permissions only appear when someone chooses to contribute a post or enrich the information that sits around a necklace entry.
Paid enhancements support visibility and feedback, not advice.
Community Boosts are optional enhancements for exposure, response visibility, and extra feedback loops inside the community. They are not framed as premium consulting. This distinction matters for review because it keeps Yexil aligned with a social product where payments extend participation tools instead of unlocking external expertise.
Every surface points back to necklace discovery, saving, and discussion.
The final listing package, in-app navigation, and bundled site all reinforce the same identity: Yexil is a vertical community for necklace collectors and enthusiasts. Reviewers see a product that opens into community browsing, highlights collection boards and post detail, and uses profiles as continuation points for further discovery. That identity stays consistent across the app, the support pages, and the final submission materials.