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100-Day Habit Tracker
Habitastic
TaskMelt turns mental chaos into clarity. Just talk โ no structure needed, no formatting required. Our AI listens to your brain dump and instantly organizes everything into clean, actionable lists.
Traditional productivity apps make you think about HOW to organize before you can even start. TaskMelt removes that barrier entirely. No categories to choose, no priority levels to assign, no overwhelming interfaces. Just you, your voice, and instant organization.
Built by a solo developer with ADHD who couldn't find a productivity app that worked for her brain.
Arclify is a gamified habit tracker built around a structure designed to survive a bad week, not collapse because of one.
Most habit apps assume life goes smoothly. If you miss a day your streak breaks, the motivation drops, and most people quit. Arclify works differently.
How it works: You commit to a 90-day Season with a real finish line instead of an endless loop Weekly targets reset every 7 days so a rough week ends the week, not the Season As you build consistency you earn XP, level up, collect coins and maintain streaks Weekly goals adjust gradually so you build real capacity over time
Who it is for: People who have tried habit trackers before and quit after one bad week. The structure is built specifically for that moment.
Pricing: 7-day free trial with full access. Then $12.99 per month or $30.99 per 90-day Season.
Available on iOS.
taskmelt
Arclifytaskmelt's answer
Arclify's answer:
Most habit trackers treat a missed day as a failure. Arclify is built around the opposite assumption, that a hard week is inevitable and the system should survive it. The core mechanic is a 90-day Season with a weekly reset built in. The Season gives you a real finish line. The weekly reset means one bad week ends the week, not the whole Season. Weekly targets also adjust gradually so you build real capacity over time rather than burning out in week one. On top of that there is a full gamification layer: XP, levels, coins and streaks that makes showing up feel like it means something without being overwhelming.
taskmelt's answer
Traditional productivity apps assume you already know what you need to do and just need a place to write it down. But for people with ADHD, anxiety, or chronic overwhelm, the problem isn't writing tasks โ it's untangling the mental chaos to figure out what the tasks even are.
TaskMelt is the only app that starts with a voice brain dump and ends with organized, prioritized action items. You don't choose categories. You don't assign priority levels. You just talk โ ramble, go on tangents, circle back โ and the AI sorts it all out. Other apps like Todoist, Things 3, or Notion require you to think about HOW to organize. TaskMelt just lets you think, period.
Arclify's answer:
Most competitors either punish you for missing a day with a broken streak, or they are so flexible that there is no real commitment or finish line. Arclify sits between those two. There is real structure, a 90-day Season with a clear end, but the weekly reset means the structure survives real life. You are not choosing between accountability and forgiveness. You get both.
taskmelt's answer
People with ADHD and neurodivergent minds who struggle with traditional productivity apps. Overwhelmed professionals whose mental to-do list is longer than their actual one. Parents juggling school runs, appointments, groceries, and work. Chronic overthinkers who need to get everything out of their head and into something actionable. Anyone whose brain moves too fast for conventional task managers.
Arclify's answer:
Men in their 20s and 30s who have tried habit trackers before and quit after a bad week. People who are motivated and genuinely want to build consistency but have found that most systems only work when life is already going well. iOS users in the US market.
taskmelt's answer
I have ADHD. Every productivity app I tried assumed my brain worked in neat, organized categories โ but it doesn't. My thoughts come in waves, tangents, and spirals. I'd open Todoist and freeze because I couldn't even figure out where to start organizing.
So I built TaskMelt for myself. An app where I could just open my mouth, dump everything out, and have AI do the organizing part my brain struggles with. Turns out a lot of people's brains work like mine. Built it as a solo developer from Tamil Nadu, India.
Arclify's answer:
Arclify was built by a solo founder who kept watching people around him quit goals they genuinely cared about. Not because they stopped wanting it, but because the system they were using had no way to survive a hard week. One bad week would break the streak, the tracker would go red, and something in the brain would treat the whole thing as over. The app was built specifically to solve that moment, the week where life falls apart and most people quit.
taskmelt's answer
Arclify's answer:
React Native and Expo for cross-platform iOS development, RevenueCat for subscription management.
taskmelt's answer
Todoist - Todoist is a to-do list that helps you get organized, at work and in life.
Habitica - Habitica is a free habit building and productivity application.
Todo - Todo is aย to-do and task list app.
Streaks - The to-do list that helps you form good habits.
Ordr App - The AI task manager for busy brains. Capture messy thoughts and let Ordr turn them into a clear, actionable plan.
Grit - Game Engine