Evolvia was built by one person. Not a team, not a startup — just someone who got tired of looking at a screen time report and feeling nothing change. The built-in tools were either too passive to matter or too blunt to be useful. Something in between felt missing.
So I built it. Evolvia is the app I actually wanted: honest about where your time goes, clear about what you can do about it, and designed to stay out of your way the rest of the time. No nags, no guilt trips, no dark patterns.
Everything in Evolvia — every feature, every screen, every line of code — was built and shipped by one person. That means things move at a different pace than a funded startup. But it also means every decision is intentional, and every piece of feedback goes directly to the person who can act on it.
Evolvia is early. There will be bugs. There will be rough edges. But the foundation is solid and the direction is clear — and it's only getting better from here.
Evolvia is a one-person project. I handle everything — design, development, support, and every decision about where the product goes next. That's not a limitation I'm apologizing for. It's what allows every part of the app to be intentional rather than committee-approved.
I use Evolvia every day. When something doesn't work right, I'm the first to notice it. When a user sends a bug report, it lands directly in my inbox. There's no buffer between the person who made the app and the people using it — and that's exactly how I want it.