WebDev - Unisex Oversized Standard T-Shirt
Why settle for plain when you can wear your personality? This clever design tells a story everyone recognizes but few dare to display. Honest, relatable, and unapologetically real.
Perfect for those who appreciate humor that hits close to home and aren't afraid to wear their truth on their sleeve (literally).
And guess WHAT!!- FREE SHIPPING!

Fabric: 100% cotton with 180 GSM for a structured drape without bulk. Lightweight enough for all-day comfort during those marathon debugging sessions, substantial enough to hide your stress sweat when production breaks.
Fit: Unisex oversized fit – designed with extra length and sleeve drop for a stylish slouch. Roomy enough to accommodate your imposter syndrome and the snacks you keep at your desk. Perfect for hiding in during stand-up meetings.
Design: The ultimate software engineering truth bomb. When someone asks "What do you do for a living?" and you respond "I WORK ON IT AS A SOFTWARE ENGINEER" – but plot twist: you're literally a bug. Because let's face it, half your job is creating bugs and the other half is fixing them, so you might as well become one with the bugs.
This minimalist cartoon perfectly captures the existential comedy of being a software engineer. It's a visual representation of every developer's relationship with their code – professional on the outside, absolute chaos on the inside, and somehow always involving bugs no matter how many unit tests you write.
Care: Wash inside-out in cold water, dry on low heat. Flip it inside out before ironing. Unlike your production code, these care instructions are thoroughly tested and bug-free (we think).
Perfect for: software engineers, developers, QA engineers who've seen some things, anyone who's ever said "it works on my machine," tech interviews where you need to establish dominance, casual Fridays at tech companies, or explaining your job to relatives who still think you "fix computers."
Warning: Wearing this shirt may result in knowing chuckles from fellow developers, "too real" comments from coworkers, and an inexplicable urge to explain the joke to non-technical people who won't get it. Side effects include feeling validated in your career choice, increased bug-related humor appreciation, and spontaneous laughter during code reviews. Not responsible for the sudden realization that your entire career is just professional bug wrangling.