Never heard of this language, but it looks interesting. Very modern, certainly. One thing that stood out to me is that there's apparently the ability to write a bare `for` loop...? Is that just equivalent to while (true) in other languages?
What was really "shady": 1) Attempts by competitors and their minions to blank out any supporters or positive news on V. 2) Mass shadowbanning and banning of V supporters, while censoring lots of positive coverage. 3) Tipping the scales (also reflected in downvoting), by allowing lies and even direct slander from known persons of competing organizations (languages even on their profiles), while they pushed what looked like HN "favored" or "protected status" languages.
Arguably, only the explosion of AI slop (maybe it's more profitable), has slowed down the outrageous bombardment of Zig and Rust peddling. Languages which are not even in the top 10, but one would not have known that, by the number of previous HN headlines.
You should judge the language based on its license and what it does, not on the morality of people who wrote it and sponsored it.
Either produce an alternative language which does the same thing written by more "unshady" people and supported by a large corporation (talking about the "small language" comment here).
These human emotions won't matter in 6 months as code will be increasingly written by machines which have no such considerations.
The AI companies are arguably taking taxpayers (via electric bills) on a ride. A lot of the code, which people get fooled into thinking are AI "solutions", is code already written by humans or even stolen by disregarding licenses and copyright. A problem not just in programming, but widely complained about by book authors and artists.
The "AI" makes a few changes of the free content it sucked up, then gives it back based on correct prompts, for a fee. They got it for free, but you will pay a fee. If it is not something simple, it's often riddled with errors or takes a huge numbers of prompts to get it right. So some time was saved in typing, but then lost in code review and fixing errors. Humans that can understand what they are doing, troubleshoot, and architect are still needed.
Shady people is one thing, marketing a language with impossible claims is another.
People got interested in the language over wildl claims that are simply CS-wise impossible. Later, these were removed from the site and you are left with a.. not too interesting language. I'm judging it on this late phase, with a bad taste in my mouth from the former shenanigans.
> in 6 months as code will be increasingly written by machines