I run a handful of WordPress sites. The plugin problem is real. I've spent more time managing plugin updates, conflicts, and security patches than actually building content for the sites.
But the reason I'm still on WordPress isn't loyalty. It's that my clients can maintain their own sites without me. A small business owner updates their own pages, adds blog posts, changes a phone number. No developer needed. That's not a feature of WordPress. That IS the product.
EmDash solves a developer problem (sandboxed plugins, TypeScript, Workers) by building a developer product. Nothing wrong with that. But calling it a WordPress successor misses why WordPress won in the first place. It wasn't the code quality. It was the guy who runs a bakery being able to edit his own website on a Sunday morning.
They could also use Ghost of any other random CMS. Everyone uses WordPress because of network effects in terms of site design and ecosystem. This has been the whole pitch of Squarespace too!
But the reason I'm still on WordPress isn't loyalty. It's that my clients can maintain their own sites without me. A small business owner updates their own pages, adds blog posts, changes a phone number. No developer needed. That's not a feature of WordPress. That IS the product.
EmDash solves a developer problem (sandboxed plugins, TypeScript, Workers) by building a developer product. Nothing wrong with that. But calling it a WordPress successor misses why WordPress won in the first place. It wasn't the code quality. It was the guy who runs a bakery being able to edit his own website on a Sunday morning.