Five openings, rendered as crimson arcs between the rooms that should connect and do not. Thicker arcs are more decisive to the verdict. The sweeping beam scans the field; the arc with the crawling dash is the cleanest open lane: people search for a partner and talk constantly about where they are in a show, and nobody joins the two. Hover any arc to read the move that closes it. A structural read of how durable a product’s position is in its category. Not a market-size guarantee, not investment advice.
Two of the five arcs ride at Critical. The focal arc with the crawling dash is the pace-match: people talk about watching together and people talk about where they are in a show, and no product connects the two. The second critical arc is the proof nobody has: whether two strangers will actually schedule and keep a watch, then come back for a second. That single behavior decides the whole business, and no public data touches it. The three remaining arcs cover the rest: company without the synced screen, reacting live in a way a forum cannot host, and safety built as the front door rather than an afterthought. Every one is a clear want with no product behind it, which is why the slot is open. It is also why the slot is hard, and why the cheap test comes before the build.