I don't mind experimentation either, but the moment someone sounds off about better grain, speed or sharpness, I want to see proof. Objective proof! If someone says a developer is economical, I want to get some feel for how much it has cost them in time and chemistry experiments that were bad. Well, the list can go on.
If someone says that they did it for fun, that is another story. However, just mixing up a developer formula from scratch and using it is not experimentation, it is dabbling unless you can show some reason why you did it even if this reason is only for yourself.
And BTW, no one can "police" anyone on APUG, the best we can do is try to teach them the right way to do it via words if they truly do wish to experiment and then let them show concrete results.
I've been in this long enough to know of all of the great spectrum of people who wish to dabble or experiment. I remember one famous person in this area in the '80s who had a developer for color paper that was 2x faster in development rate than the commercial product. It also seemed (to him) to give better color. I talked to him personally and found that he had done no image stability, but I had. When I pointed out that the cyan dye would have an expected lifetime of about 1 year, he was shocked. He only tested development times. He withdrew the formula after that. So, no matter what you plan on doing, this area of endeavor is often much more complex than you think.
Have fun and remember that I often say "if it works for you, use it!".
PE