Most timeline and journaling apps focus on capturing more—more entries, more structure, often tied to accounts and the cloud. TimeTale takes a calmer approach. It works fully offline, with everything kept on your device. Moments turn into memories over time, forming a chronological story that you can revisit through a timeline, a grid of photos and videos, or across the globe on a map.
What inspired me to build this Most apps I tried were built around productivity, streaks, or constant input, often optimized for a single use case. I wanted something cleaner — a thoughtfully designed space that doesn’t overwhelm, where you can capture moments, projects, trips, or anything else that matters. More like a personal timeline you return to — intuitive by design and uncluttered.
What problem I wanted to solve I wanted an easy way to capture memories and revisit moments over time with minimal setup. TimeTale works fully offline, so everything stays on your device. Memories can be explored as a growing timeline, a grid of photos and videos, or across the globe on a map — making it easy to look back from different perspectives.
How the process evolved It started as a simple timeline for moments. Over time, I added multiple views, better organization through categories, and more recently an optional, on-demand walkthrough so people can discover features without forced onboarding. I also introduced offline ways to back up and restore your memories, while keeping everything usable without an internet connection. The principle stayed the same: clean by default, intuitive, and guided only when you want it.
The app is live on Playstore, and I’d really appreciate feedback — what feels useful, confusing, or unnecessary. Thanks for checking it out
I m getting ready to launch TimeTale and would really appreciate early feedback. It s a clean, offline-first timeline to capture moments, projects, trips, or anything that matters. If you have a few minutes, I d love to hear what feels useful, confusing, or missing.
What inspired me to build this Most apps I tried were built around productivity, streaks, or constant input, often optimized for a single use case. I wanted something cleaner — a thoughtfully designed space that doesn’t overwhelm, where you can capture moments, projects, trips, or anything else that matters. More like a personal timeline you return to — intuitive by design and uncluttered.
What problem I wanted to solve I wanted an easy way to capture memories and revisit moments over time with minimal setup. TimeTale works fully offline, so everything stays on your device. Memories can be explored as a growing timeline, a grid of photos and videos, or across the globe on a map — making it easy to look back from different perspectives.
How the process evolved It started as a simple timeline for moments. Over time, I added multiple views, better organization through categories, and more recently an optional, on-demand walkthrough so people can discover features without forced onboarding. I also introduced offline ways to back up and restore your memories, while keeping everything usable without an internet connection. The principle stayed the same: clean by default, intuitive, and guided only when you want it.
The app is live on Playstore, and I’d really appreciate feedback — what feels useful, confusing, or unnecessary. Thanks for checking it out
What inspired me to build this
Most apps I tried were built around productivity, streaks, or constant input, often optimized for a single use case. I wanted something cleaner — a thoughtfully designed space that doesn’t overwhelm, where you can capture moments, projects, trips, or anything else that matters. More like a personal timeline you return to — intuitive by design and uncluttered.
What problem I wanted to solve
I wanted an easy way to capture memories and revisit moments over time with minimal setup. TimeTale works fully offline, so everything stays on your device. Memories can be explored as a growing timeline, a grid of photos and videos, or across the globe on a map — making it easy to look back from different perspectives.
How the process evolved
It started as a simple timeline for moments. Over time, I added multiple views, better organization through categories, and more recently an optional, on-demand walkthrough so people can discover features without forced onboarding. I also introduced offline ways to back up and restore your memories, while keeping everything usable without an internet connection. The principle stayed the same: clean by default, intuitive, and guided only when you want it.
The app is live on Playstore, and I’d really appreciate feedback — what feels useful, confusing, or unnecessary. Thanks for checking it out
Looks nice is very cool, good luck on your lunch