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#GateAppUpdate | User Experience Reality Check
App updates are meant to make things better—but real progress should be measured by usability, not just appearance.
After the recent Gate App update, a critical issue surfaced: image uploads in status posts no longer work. Even images that were previously posted successfully now fail, and sending images returns an “image sending failed” error. Interestingly, images still work normally in community sections, which strongly indicates this is a functional bug within specific features—not a device or network problem.
This issue has lasted for several days. A support ticket was submitted with the expectation that the updated system would improve efficiency. Instead, responses have been limited to generic follow-ups, without a clear solution or timeline. When problems persist without progress, user trust naturally begins to weaken.
The updated ticket system itself also adds friction. What was once a direct conversation within a single ticket now requires navigating to a separate communication record just to continue the discussion. This extra step feels unnecessary and counterproductive—especially when users are already facing unresolved technical issues.
Adding to the frustration is the 24-hour waiting rule before users can urge a response. When a core feature like image uploading is broken, delays like this feel misaligned with real user needs. An upgrade should streamline support, not slow it down.
This raises an important question: what defines a successful update? If new systems introduce basic functionality issues, longer response times, and more complicated workflows, then the overall user experience is moving backward.
Users don’t just want refreshed interfaces or new structures. What we truly value is stability, efficiency, and accountability. Fixing core bugs, restoring image functionality, and simplifying support communication would do far more to improve the Gate App experience than surface-level changes.
An update should mean progress—not compromise.