The final stretch of the hackathon involves submitting your project and presenting it to the judges. Here's everything you need to know to ensure a smooth process and give your project the best chance at success.
📅 Submission Deadline: All projects must be submitted by Sunday, November 19th 2023 at 09:00 am UTC+3. Late submissions won't be accepted, so be sure to plan ahead!
🔗 How to Submit: Head over to your Hacker Dashboard to submit your project. You'll fill out the form with essential details like your project title, description, and a link to your repository.
🎥 Demo Video: While optional, we strongly encourage you to include a 2-4 minute demo video showcasing your project. This video will be featured on the ETHGlobal Showcase, so take your time making it clear and informative.
💰 Partner Prizes: On the last step of the submission form, you'll be able to select which partner prizes you'd like to apply for. Please ensure to select these prizes correctly as it is the only way for partners to assess your project.
Start Fresh: All work on your project must begin after the hackathon officially starts. Any prior code, designs, or assets are not allowed unless they're from public libraries or starter kits. Projects built before the event may still participate but won't qualify for partner prizes or the Finalist category.
Version Control: Use version control to track your code during the event. Submissions with large single commits or missing histories may be disqualified, as it's important to show your progress throughout the hackathon.
Open Source Libraries & Boilerplates: You're welcome to use open-source libraries and starter kits to kickstart your project, but be transparent.
Include Everything: Your submission should include a GitHub Repo, Figma files, or equivalent, proving the work was done during the hackathon. Clearly distinguish between what's new and what's reused.
When you're ready to submit, you have two options:
1. Finalist and Partner Prizes
Opting for this will require you to present your project to judges in the Finalist judging session. You'll also present to partners for any prizes you applied for at their booths.
2. Partner Prizes Only
If you're not aiming for the Finalist category, you just have to select your partner prizes during submission and you are set. You are free to demo your project to the partners at their booths and collect feedback and connect.
Once you've submitted your project, information about your Finalist judging session will appear on your Hacker Dashboard. Here's what to expect:
Judges will evaluate your project based on five categories:
Once your project is submitted, you're set. The following part is entirely optional. Present live to partners for the prizes you applied for. Here's how it works:
Go to each partner booth for every prize you've applied to.
Your demo video, while optional, is a key part of showcasing your project. Make sure it meets the following guidelines:
Common mistakes to avoid in your demo video
We see a lot of these mistakes during submissions, which require a team to re-submit their video in order to qualify for judging. Please be mindful of these common issues if you'd like to be considered for prizes. If we see one or more of these items on your submission, you will be asked to re-submit the video.
Iris - Iris, messenger of the gods. Twitter x Patreon x Twitch x TikTok, built on Lens
Splits - Automatically route funds from one address to set of addresses
Ollie Verse - NFT Trading Card Game that allows player to create and mint their own trading cards
Cadbury - Open, neutral, border-less, decentralized, and censorship resistance meetings
Umbra - Umbra is protocol for enabling stealth payments on the Ethereum blockchain
Sunset Supreme - A Google sheets plugin for MultiBaas (a REST API for Ethereum) to allow display, interaction, and analysis of data on the blockchain
DeFi777 - Use DeFi protocols from any wallet! Wrapper tokens let you use Uniswap, Aave, Balancer & Set in normal wallets without a dapp browser
Oya Market - Oya is a decentralized ecommerce protocol owned by its users and run by smart contracts