Launching today

BeeClean
Turn a full camera roll into a game you win swipe by swipe.
3 followers
Turn a full camera roll into a game you win swipe by swipe.
3 followers
Your camera roll is a graveyard of duplicates, dead screen recordings, and videos you'll never watch. BeeClean turns clearing it into a game. Open Quick Cleanup and your whole camera roll becomes a swipe feed. Flick right to keep, left to delete. Junk gone in seconds, and nothing goes unless you say so. Every swipe levels up your bee and stacks coins to spend on fresh drip in the Shop. Free up gigabytes of storage in minutes, 100% on-device. Watch your storage bar drop while your bee levels up.









Hey Product Hunters! Paul here.
I'm an indie maker with close to 8,000 photos and videos and zero self-control about deleting anything. My phone would throw up "storage full" at the worst possible moment, usually mid-recording of my dog, and every cleaner app I tried felt like filing taxes. So I'd give up and delete the app instead of the photos.
That's the whole reason BeeClean exists. I wanted clearing my phone to feel less like a chore and more like something I'd actually open. So we built it around a little bee that gets happier the more space you free up, and turned the cleanup itself into a swipe game:
Keep or Delete: swipe through your camera roll like a card game, you decide what stays
Duplicates & big videos: clear out the stuff quietly eating your storage
BeeCoins & streaks: every clean earns coins and keeps your run going
The Shop: spend coins on caps, goggles, wings, crowns. my bee has way more drip than I do
100% on-device: your photos never leave your phone
I haven't seen a "storage full" popup since, and honestly the bee is the reason I kept coming back.
We're in early beta at trybeeclean.app and I'm looking for testers who'll be brutally honest with me. If you try it, tell me what's confusing, what's missing, or what made you want to close it. I'm reading and replying to every piece of feedback I get.
One thing I'm dying to know: how many photos are sitting in your camera roll right now? Be honest, I'll go first: 7,842.