Reveller — No Time for Regrets
The average adult spends 6 hours and 40 minutes a day on a screen.
The math is shocking. A 100 days a year can add up minute-by-minute. Roughly 17 years of a normal lifespan. Spent watching other people learn a language, run a marathon, find a partner, start a business, play with a pet, raise kids, take a dream trip — the exact things you said you'd do when you have the time.
You have the time. It's time to take it back from that screen in your hand.
Reveller app is for people who are done watching strangers vicariously live the life they wanted in the first place. Set limits on the apps that eat your hours, see exactly how many you've taken back, and put them somewhere that compounds —> a hobby, a healthy body, a business, a relationship, a trip.
— HOW IT WORKS —
• Pick the apps that take more than they give. Set daily limits. Reveller blocks them when you go over.
• See your free time come back. A clean weekly and monthly ledger of the time you reclaimed.
• Block screens with a purpose. A calm, cute, funny or emotional video overlay on top of the problematic app to remind you how long you have been looking at your screen with.
• Mindful pause. Tap an over-used app and Reveller asks if you really want to open it and a mini game challenge to get back in.
• Mindful timers float over tracked apps that show you actually how many minutes you have spent today.
• Onboarding that analyses your goals
• Built for groups. Invite friends and become Revellers together. Compare reclaimed hours and what you did with them.
— REVELLING —
Everything in moderation is key to finding balance in life
Every hour you don't get back is an hour you traded — for someone else's vacation, someone else's workout, someone else's opinion at 11pm on a Tuesday. Other apps in this category sell you less. Less scrolling, less dopamine, less time. That framing leaves the hole open.
Reveller is a community of people that want to live like it is 1999. The hours you save aren't subtracted from your day — they're moved. To dancing. To the gym. To the language app you actually wanted to open. To the business plan that's been a Google Doc for two years. To dinner with someone who's there.
There's a life on the other side of it, and it's yours.
— ACCESSIBILITY ACCESS (OPTIONAL) —
Reveller can use Android's Accessibility service to make app blocking instant. With your permission, Reveller detects when a blocked app comes to the foreground (a window-change event) and shows your focus screen instead. Reveller reads only which app opened — it never reads the contents of your screen, your keystrokes, your passwords, or anything you type, and nothing from the Accessibility service is collected, stored, or sent off your device.
This permission is optional. Blocking also works without it; enabling Accessibility just makes the block appear faster and flicker-free. You are asked to consent in the app before the permission is requested, you enable the service yourself in Android settings, and you can turn it off again at any time.