Video and Social Media Analysis
Deep investigation into Contra submission videos, social media presence, and repeat winner patterns across all three makeathon editions.
Verdict
No pre-challenge videos exist. All Contra submissions include hosted videos, but these serve as project demos for judging and do not expose public upload dates. The real differentiator issocial media presence and repeat participation.
Methodology
We scraped Contra community topic pages and individual profiles with Playwright, extracted media.contra.com video URLs, analyzed Cloudinary video metadata, checked all winner project pages (figma.site and figma.bot URLs), searched X/Twitter for winner handles and hashtags, queried YouTube for winner demos, and cross-referenced Figma blog interviews for build timeline quotes.
Key Patterns
Pattern 1: Contra Submission Videos Are Universal
Every makeathon entry includes Contra-hosted videos uploaded tomedia.contra.com (Cloudinary CDN). These serve as project demos for the judging panel. Since all entries have them, video presence on Contra alone is not a winning differentiator.
Pattern 2: Social Handle Tagging (56% of Winners)
5 out of 9 winners had X/Twitter handles tagged in the official @figma winner announcement. Winners tagged on X benefit from direct visibility to Figma's audience. However, 4 winners won without being tagged, proving project quality can overcome lower social presence.
Pattern 3: Repeat Winners Exist
Lee Black (@mrblackstudio) is the only two-time winner across editions. He won "Boundary Pushing" for Airwwave in March 2026, then "Innovative Workflow" for Connected Earth in Config 2026 (announced June 24, 2026). Repeat participation with entirely new projects appears to be a viable strategy.
Pattern 4: Award Categories Confirm Social Matters
The existence of "Fan Favorite on Social" (won by @DannPetty) and "Build in Public" (Config 2026) as official award categories confirms thatsocial media presence is an explicitly judged criterion. These are not incidental correlations.
Pattern 5: YouTube Demos Are Rare (1 in 9)
Only Dann Petty (Reframe It) published a YouTube demo, uploadedMarch 4, 2026 (Day 31 of the March 2026 challenge window). The video was posted during the challenge, not before. YouTube presence is uncommon but signals high social investment.
Pattern 6: Config 2026 Drew 11,000+ Participants
The latest edition was the largest yet, with over 11,000 participants. Winners announced June 24, 2026: Visual Atlas (Grand Prize), Doodle Fonts (2nd), Your Eyes Can Speak, Connected Earth, Still Here Focus, and Sound Check. Lee Black's second win in this edition reinforces the repeat-winner pattern.
Winner Social Profiles
| Project | Creator | Edition | X Handle | Tagged | YouTube | Repeat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Common Thread | Charlota Blunarova | Mar 2026 | @0xCharlota | Yes | -- | -- |
| TOKYO | Kiel Cole | Mar 2026 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Pucker | Aleyna Catak | Mar 2026 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Airwwave | Lee Black | Mar 2026 | @mrblackstudio | Yes | -- | 2x |
| Duet Booth | Paige Latimer | Mar 2026 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Reframe It | Dann Petty | Mar 2026 | @DannPetty | Yes | Mar 4 | -- |
| Visual Atlas | Bene Brandhofer | Config 2026 | @benebrandhofer | Yes | -- | -- |
| Connected Earth | Lee Black | Config 2026 | @mrblackstudio | Yes | -- | 2x |
| Web Poetry | Cara Ellis | Sep 2025 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
Data Download
Complete analysis with per-winner video URLs, social handles, repeat winner status, and build timeline evidence.
Download deep_video_analysis.csv