A curated list of code, tools, and resources for the Move programming language ecosystem.
Awesome Move is a curated GitHub repository listing code, tools, and educational content for the Move programming language community. It aggregates resources from across the ecosystem, including frameworks, libraries, wallets, SDKs, and tutorials for various Move-powered blockchains like Sui and Aptos. The project helps developers quickly find reliable materials to build secure, asset-oriented smart contracts.
Smart contract developers, blockchain engineers, and researchers working with or evaluating the Move programming language across platforms like Sui, Aptos, and Starcoin.
It saves significant research time by providing a single, community-vetted source for high-quality Move resources, from core tools to production examples. Unlike generic lists, it focuses specifically on the Move ecosystem's unique tools and patterns.
Code and content from the Move community.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Lists resources for multiple Move-powered blockchains like Sui, Aptos, and Starcoin, providing a holistic view that saves cross-platform research time.
Includes diverse educational content such as the Move Book, tutorials, and academic papers, accelerating onboarding for new developers.
Aggregates essential development tools like IDEs, package managers, and the Move Prover for formal verification, all in one place.
Provides implementations for common patterns like fungible tokens and DeFi protocols, sourced from real projects like Starcoin and Diem.
Resources are links to external projects, so their availability, maintenance, and quality aren't controlled, leading to potential dead links or outdated content.
As a community-driven list, updates rely on contributions, which may lag behind rapid ecosystem changes, risking incomplete or obsolete information.
It's a static directory without interactive features like code execution or direct downloads, forcing users to navigate away for practical use.