Just One More Hour
It's 11pm and you've already put in a full day. You know you should shut the laptop but there's a feature you've been thinking about since dinner. And you know that if you work with Claude Code one more hour it will exist before you go to bed.
So you stay.
Gamblers say "one more hand." Bingers say "one more episode." And now Builders everywhere are saying "Just One More Hour." A new addiction is sweeping through the Startup ecosystem.
THE MACHINE CHANGED
For all of human history, meaningful work took time. Projects unfolded over weeks, months and years. Progress was measured in milestones that were spaced far enough apart that shutting down for the night was the obviously rational choice. Nothing important was going to happen between 10pm and 8am, so why stay at the desk? Sleep was important and the work would still be there in the morning.
That math just broke.
One extra hour with Claude Code or Codex and your project is materially farther along. A few extra hours and your to-do list visibly shrinks. Features materialize and bugs get eradicated. Testing happens so quickly that you can build loops that ship, test, fix and ship again while you watch. Websites and mobile apps appear almost out of thin air. For the first time in history, a single hour of work produces SIGNIFICANT output you can see, touch and demo.
And the human brain is wired to respond to this kind of stimulus. Visible progress and accomplishment trigger dopamine. The gap between effort and reward has collapsed from months to minutes, and every Builder's reward circuitry is lighting up like a slot machine that actually pays out.
Which leads us to a question that needs to be answered: Is this dopamine earned or unearned?
EARNED VS. UNEARNED DOPAMINE
The release of dopamine creates a reward circuit in the brain that equates specific experiences with pleasure and reinforces them via intense cravings.
Cheap sources of unearned dopamine train your system to want more cheap sources of dopamine. Post on social media to chase “likes” and you get a dose of unearned dopamine. Become an “angry keyboard warrior” and the crowd’s retaliation feeds you unearned dopamine. Day trade stocks and watch the minute-to-minute fluctuation in price and you’re swimming in unearned dopamine.
Sources of unearned dopamine are everywhere. Your brain gets paid and your life gets nothing.
Earned dopamine is different. It's the reward for actual accomplishment: The deal you’ve been working on for months that closes, the marathon that you finish after a season of training, or the product that your team has been working on for months finally ships. Nobody writes thought pieces warning you about the dangers of actually finishing things. Earned dopamine is supposed to be good!
But here's an uncomfortable new truth:
THE DOPAMINE FROM JUST ONE MORE HOUR IS EARNED!
The progress is real, the feature you shipped actually works and the bug you’ve been chasing down is actually dead. This isn't a casino trick where they trick you into thinking you’re winning. You ARE winning.
And that's exactly what makes this a dangerous addiction the Startup community is facing. Nobody intervenes on an addiction that produces results. Nobody’s going to tell you to stop being productive.
COMPRESSION IS WHAT TURNS A SUBSTANCE INTO A DRUG
I try to come up with analogues to explain new conceptual frameworks, and what follows is the best I’ve come up with. It’s not great, but it’s useful in making a profound point.
The analogue: People chewed coca leaves for thousands of years without a societal crisis and the molecule was never the problem. We learned to concentrate it and speed up its delivery and the harmless substance suddenly became cocaine. Concentration plus delivery speed can turn a benign substance into a drug.
Builders have been getting high on shipping forever. But the shipping high used to come a few times a year after months of grinding, with long stretches of friction in between. AI coding tools took the same substance and removed the friction and sped everything up. The high is now available hourly, on demand, with no natural cooldown.
What nobody wants to internalize is that the friction was protective. The sheer act of typing to code, compile times and waiting on your teammates weren't useless inefficiencies. They acted as natural guardrails and forced rest into the system whether you wanted it or not. AI just removed all of them at once and we’ve embraced it without any understanding of the consequences.
THE GAME ON THE FIELD
If this were purely a personal willpower problem, the advice would be easy: Log off, touch grass and get some sleep. But the Startup ecosystem has a nasty structural twist that turns a private temptation into a collective trap.
Speed has become the new moat.
When every team has access to the same models, the same tools and the same compute, it’s tempting to believe that the only differentiator becomes how many hours you feed the machine. Your competitor's product is materially better every single morning which means shutting down at 9pm is no longer a lifestyle decision. It's a competitive decision.
I've written before about how people aren't irrational, they're rational actors responding to the game that's on the field. So take a look at the game that's now on the field for Founders: The cost of an extra hour is low, the output of an extra hour is visible, and everyone else is putting in the hour. Run that math and "Just One More Hour" isn't an addiction at all. It's the dominant strategy.
That's how arms races work. Every individual decision is rational and the collective outcome is brutal.
THE TRADE YOU'RE REALLY MAKING
So is the conclusion "work less"? No. The conclusion is that many Builders could be mispricing the trade.
When speed becomes abundant, it stops being the edge. The machine supplies the speed now. What the machine cannot supply is the judgment that turns it into velocity: Knowing what to build, what to kill, what actually matters to a customer, and what's a shiny object wearing a customer costume. Speed can drive you 100 miles an hour in circles. Speed PLUS Judgment gets you the Velocity to push your business forward. An opinionated perspective about the solution is what’s scarce in an AI-saturated Startup ecosystem, and it’s precisely this clarity of thinking that degrades for most people after midnight.
Anyone who has reviewed their own 1am decisions in the morning knows this.
A well-rested team pointing the machine at the right problems will beat an exhausted team pointing it at the wrong one, and the gap will compound every week because the machine multiplies the quality of its instructions.
THE MACHINE SUPPLIES THE SPEED. YOU SUPPLY THE JUDGMENT THAT TURNS INTO VELOCITY.
Act accordingly.
ONE MORE THING
I want to be honest about where this essay comes from. I'm back in the Builder's seat, and I live in Claude Code 10 hours a day right now. I've always been a hard worker and I'd put my career track record of outworking the competition up against just about anyone's. I thought I understood what the pull of work felt like but this is different.
The pull of "just one more hour" is showing up for me every single night without fail, and it arrives wearing the most convincing disguise an addiction has ever worn: Genuine, demonstrable, earned progress.
I know the dopamine is real and I’m not ignorant of its long term impact. I’m very self-aware. But what I do know is that tonight, somewhere around 11pm, I'll feel the pull and work a few more hours anyway.