1. Did you use mobile device or a laptop to test the prototype?
Desktop, with an actual portrait-orientation desktop monitor.
2. What did you find unexpected about the prototype?
Well, the "reply" link and the line with counts and the latest comment are new.
3. Which steps in the "Try the Prototype" section did you find difficult to complete?
Editing my existing comment. Also, filling out the CAPTCHA; it didn't have a submit button distinct from the Reply.
4. What do you like about the prototype?
The reply feature so we don't have to edit the source and figure out how many colons to use to indent properly.
5. What do you wish was different about the prototype?
I'd kind of like to see an "edit" button on my own posts. I suppose discouraging editing of comments after-the-fact is somewhat healthy, as we're not supposed to do that in a way that changes the meaning. However, I think it would mostly be used to fix typos.
It seems to be missing a way to input special characters, like the degree symbol or Greek letters - the sort of thing common in STEM articles on Wikipedia.
6. Can you imagine this design not working on some pages? If you can, please share links to these pages? It would be very helpful.
Any talk page on enwiki where there's an RFC or merge discussion or something where people are voting. Then we need the ability to add an item in a bulleted list. See the "Discuss" links from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requested_moves/Current_discussions for examples.
Sometimes discussions also end up with very deep nested replies, which causes the text to become extremely narrow. Someone eventually "outdents" it to reset it to the left margin so the conversation can continue readably. I'm not sure how that would be done here other than by editing the source to put in . -- Beland (talk) 06:47, 3 August 2022 (UTC)