Launching today

Digital Will Locker
100% offline, AES-256 encrypted vault for your legacy
13 followers
100% offline, AES-256 encrypted vault for your legacy
13 followers
100% offline, AES-256 encrypted vault for your will, IDs, passwords & final wishes. Zero servers — we can't see your data. Record legacy messages, set a Dead Man's Switch for loved ones, and use 10 offline AI tools. Free forever.







Really like the offline-first angle, that's the main reason I'd trust something like this over cloud-only options. One thing I'd love to see is a printable recovery sheet with a one-time QR code so my family can open the vault from a printed paper if my devices are gone or locked. Would make handoff way less scary for non-tech relatives.
@nisanurahraz Really appreciate this — the "handoff for non-tech relatives" problem is something I think about a lot. A printable recovery sheet with a one-time QR is a great idea, especially since the whole point of the app is that it shouldn't require your family to be technical to access what matters. I don't have this built yet, but it's now on my radar for a future update. Would the QR ideally link to a recovery phrase, or trigger something more automated?
One thing I'd love to see is a printable recovery sheet with a one-time QR code so a family member can unlock a specific file if I'm incapacitated, without giving them full vault access. Really helps for medical emergencies where you need one document, not everything.
@minekld0 This is a sharper version of the same idea — selective, single-document access instead of full vault unlock makes a lot of sense for medical emergency use cases specifically. That's a meaningfully different feature from a full recovery sheet (partial access vs. full access), so thank you for spelling out the distinction. Definitely noting this as its own use case to explore.
the dead man's switch is such a thoughtful touch for a tool like this. offline-first with zero servers is exactly the right call for something this sensitive.
@mcahitkratc17y Thank you — that was exactly the design goal. Most "legacy" tools compromise on offline-first because it's harder to build, but for something this sensitive I didn't want to cut that corner. Glad it's landing the way it was intended to.