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Saturday, May 9, 2026

Why Gen Z Is Lowkey Running the Future of Tech

There’s something kinda wild happening right now; a whole generation grew up online, accidentally learned tech skills through gaming, modding, editing videos, building Discord servers, and now they’re entering programming like it’s second nature.

A lot of older people imagine coding as this super serious thing where genius hackers type green text in dark rooms. In reality; most programmers today are just people googling errors, watching tutorials at 2AM, and praying their code works before the deadline.

Gen Z changed the vibe around tech completely. Programming isn’t only for “computer people” anymore. Someone can start by making a Roblox game, customizing a profile page, automating homework with Python, or building a tiny app for fun; and suddenly they’re learning actual software development skills without realizing it.

The coolest part is how accessible everything became. You can literally learn web development from YouTube; AI basics from TikTok clips; cybersecurity from free labs; coding from random strangers on Reddit and GitHub.

No expensive setup. No giant classroom needed. Just curiosity and Wi-Fi.

At the same time, tech culture became way more chaotic in the funniest way possible. Developers now communicate using memes, reaction images, and phrases like “works on my machine.” Half of programming is engineering; the other half is emotional survival.

And honestly; that’s what makes modern tech interesting.

The next generation of programmers probably won’t come from traditional paths only. They’ll come from gaming communities, content creators, indie developers, and teenagers experimenting online because they got bored one weekend.

The future of tech is being built by people who grew up pressing “skip ad” faster than they learned multiplication tables; and somehow that makes perfect sense.



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