A collection of original terms coined by Kwali Bunker to describe the mindset, methods, and creative processes behind his work.
Definition:
A person who reliably transforms ideas into finished, real-world outcomes by acquiring whatever skills each idea requires. The defining trait is consistency: idea → skill → project, repeated over a lifetime.
Usage:
“An ideoactualist doesn’t wait for circumstances; they create until the idea exists.”
Definition:
The philosophy that ideas only gain value when converted into reality through intentional skill-building, disciplined effort, and completed projects.
Related concepts:
self-driven learning, applied creativity, idea-to-reality discipline.
Definition:
The act or process of transforming an idea into a completed project, often involving iterative refinement and hands-on skill development.
Definition:
To turn an idea into a tangible project by actively learning the required skills and executing the work.
Example:
“He ideoactualized his smart-lock concept into a functioning prototype.”
Definition:
In a manner consistent with ideoactualist practice; through active ideation, rapid learning, and decisive execution.
Example:
“She solved the engineering problem ideoactually.”
Definition:
Relating to or produced through the idea → skill → project cycle. Describes tools, methods, systems, or creations born from ideoactualist practice.
Example:
“This MAV design is a fully ideoactual achievement.”
Definition:
A structured creation method that blends traditional design processes with generative tools to accelerate research, drafting, visualization, iteration, and prototyping across multiple domains.
Usage:
“He developed the entire USS franchise framework using Rapid Generative Production.”
Definition:
Any visual, written, conceptual, or structural output created during the RGP workflow, including drafts, diagrams, storyboards, animatics, test renders, or prototype assets.
Definition:
The standard sequence inside RGP:
Idea → Research → Generate → Iterate → Prototype