πŸ’” YC Startup Failures Index

While hardware startups frequently shut down due to physical complexity or manufacturing delays, pure software startups fail for different, deeply structural reasons. The code usually works perfectlyβ€”but the business collapses due to competition, timing, platform risks, unit economics, compliance, or distribution monopolies.

Here is a structured index of 136 pure software Y Combinator startups that failed, organized by their distinct failure modes:

Failure Categories


πŸ’‘ Summary of Key Takeaways

  1. Distribution Trumps Product: In pure software, the marginal cost of a user is near-zero, but distribution channels are controlled by monopolies. If your distribution relies on Google SEO or Facebook graph hacks, you are on rented land.
  2. Beware the Feature Trap: If your startup is a single, isolated utility, expect OS creators or platform incumbents to build it natively and wipe you out.
  3. Talk to Customers First: Prioritize customer development over engineering perfection. A flawed tool that solves an urgent problem today beats a perfect database that is three years late.
  4. Unit Economics are Real: Video, hosting, or paying users cash carry heavy infrastructure costs that require immediate, high-margin monetization to survive.
  5. Acquisitions Can Be Fatal: Getting bought by a giant does not guarantee the survival of your code; corporate agendas often prioritize acquiring talent or neutralizing competition over maintaining your product.

πŸ“ Alphabetical Index of Companies

Here is a complete, alphabetical index of all the YC startups analyzed in this resource, with direct links to their detailed failure profiles:

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