Launching today

Sammy
Beat overwhelm one task at a time
2 followers
Beat overwhelm one task at a time
2 followers
Sammy turns the hardest part of any task — starting it — into a simple swipe. You get a deck of small, concrete task cards. Swipe right to start, left to skip. A built-in timer keeps you focused. No lists, no planning paralysis, just one card at a time. Built for people with ADHD, executive dysfunction, or strong procrastination. Works for all ages: kids (with parents), teens, and adults. Premium users can build their own custom decks.









I built Sammy because I have ADHD myself and traditional to-do lists never worked for me. The problem isn't knowing what to do but starting. A long list feels overwhelming before you've even begun.
Sammy removes the decision-making. You see one card, you swipe. That's it. The small friction of choosing what to tackle next is gone.
I'd love to hear from anyone who struggles with task initiation. Does this format work for you? I would also appreciate feedback on the general concept and mechanics.
One task at a time' is underrated as a productivity philosophy — most apps make the problem worse by surfacing everything at once. How do you handle the capture side? Getting tasks in quickly is usually where these tools break down
@soygus
Thank you very much Gustavo, appreciate your comment.
Honestly, capture is a deliberate gap right now. Sammy's decks are curated rather than user-fed, which sidesteps the problem entirely for the default experience and so you never have to capture anything to get started. For custom decks (premium) users do add their own tasks, and you're right that the friction there is real. It's something I'm thinking about. The constraint I'm trying to hold is that any capture mechanic can't become its own barrier, so the 'quick add' that requires categorising, prioritising and tagging before it feels done is just the same problem in a different coat. Curious how you'd approach it.