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Visual Studio Code | Kuyhaa

So he opened Chrome. Typed slowly, guilt already creeping in:

Raj shrugged. “I’ll run it in Sandboxie. Then debloat.” visual studio code kuyhaa

But Raj had a problem bigger than memory leaks: he had no credit card. No international payment enabled on his debit card. And his parents weren’t going to drop ₹5,000 on software when they barely understood what "coding" meant. So he opened Chrome

That night, he lay in bed thinking about Kuyhaa. Not as a villain, but as a symptom. A broken ecosystem where a student with talent but no money had to gamble his system’s integrity just to write open-source software. Then debloat

His final-year project—a real-time collaborative code editor—was due in two weeks. The backend was solid, but the frontend was a mess of unstyled divs and broken WebSocket connections. His laptop, a second-hand Lenovo with 4GB of RAM, screamed in protest every time he opened a modern IDE. IntelliJ? Frozen. VS Codium? Stuttered on syntax highlighting.