Egypt Temple is a terminal-style field journal for capturing thoughts, observations, and quick notes the way an archaeologist would log finds in a tomb — straight into a glowing amber CRT prompt, no menus in the way.
Open the app and you are already typing. A blinking cursor waits at the prompt. Each entry is timestamped, optionally tagged with a one-word cartouche, and sealed into your local archive. No accounts, no cloud, no tracking — your words live entirely on your device.
The interface is monospaced JetBrains Mono on a near-black background, accented in amber phosphor. ASCII box-drawing borders frame your entries like cartouches around hieroglyphs. There are no shiny buttons, no Material gloss, no friendly mascots. Only your text, the cursor, and a few terminal commands: > SEARCH to find a fragment, > SEAL to pin an entry, > RANDOM to unearth a forgotten thought, > EXPORT to share a day as plain text.
A daily counter tracks how many entries you have made today and over your lifetime in the temple. Settings are minimal but real — toggle the type-on effect, the cursor blink, export everything, or wipe the archive forever.
For writers, programmers, fieldworkers, and anyone who would rather think out loud at a prompt than tap a polished form. Offline. Distraction-free. Ancient and electric.