
Minimal Phone
Make your Android feel calmer, simpler, and less addictive
8 followers
Make your Android feel calmer, simpler, and less addictive
8 followers
Minimal Phone is an Android launcher designed to reduce impulsive phone use without making your phone feel restrictive. It combines a calm home screen, fast app search, favorites, app-specific limits, quick blocks, distraction shields, and mindful delay patterns to help you stay intentional. What makes it different is that it focuses on lightweight, practical friction instead of extreme lockdown, so your phone stays usable while becoming much less distracting.




Hi Product Hunt! I built Minimal Phone because I wanted my phone to feel calmer, more intentional, and less distracting in everyday life. A lot of minimalist setups I tried either felt too restrictive or just didn’t fit the way I actually use my phone, so I wanted to create something more balanced — simple, clean, and practical without getting in the way.
The product evolved a lot while I was building it. It started as a minimal launcher, but over time I added features like favorites, fast app search, daily limits, quick block, schedules, distraction shields, and mindful delay flows. The goal was never to punish usage, but to help people pause before opening distracting apps and make the phone feel more like a tool than a trap.
I’d especially love feedback on two things:
Does the balance between simplicity and control feel right?
Which features feel genuinely helpful vs. too much friction?
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@furkan18 This approach to balance is really thoughtful—the mindful delay concept especially resonates because it's about friction that serves a purpose rather than just restricting access. I'm curious whether you're seeing patterns in which features people actually keep enabled versus what they initially turn on out of curiosity.
@osakasaul That’s a great question. It’s still very early, so I’d be careful about calling it a real pattern yet. But my impression so far is that people tend to experiment with quite a few features at first out of curiosity, and then gradually stick with the ones that feel lightweight and supportive rather than restrictive.
The mindful delay concept in particular seems to land well because it adds a small moment of reflection without getting in the way of actual usage. But I think we’ll understand the long-term patterns much better once people have lived with it for a while.
I’m usually someone who can spend long periods on my phone without realizing how time passes, but this app really helps me use my time more efficiently. Great job
@yunus_emre_kuru Thank you so much!