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Foundstep
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FoundStep is a project management tool built for indie developers who keep starting projects but never finish them. It walks you through a structured lifecycle: capture an idea, validate it with a 7-step questionnaire, make a build-or-kill decision, lock your scope, and ship.
Scope locking is the core mechanic. Once you lock your features and todos, nothing gets added without unlocking first. Every unlock requires a written reason that gets permanently logged in your Shame History. You can always cut scope without unlocking, but adding is what costs you. This creates the friction that stops scope creep before it kills your project.
The built-in AI watches your workspace (deadlines, todo completion, lock status, unlock history) and gives you one next action at a time. No dashboards to interpret. Just a single clear directive: finish this todo, lock your scope, or ship it.
When you ship, your project goes to your Harbor, a public portfolio with your ship date, build time, and unlock count. You also get a downloadable Ship Card to share as proof you actually finished something.
FoundStep also generates a Public Wall, a developer portfolio page with your profile, project detail pages, tech stack, milestones, and screenshots. All built automatically from what you ship.
No team features. No Kanban boards. No integrations. Just the constraints that make solo developers actually finish what they start.
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Foundstep's answer:
Foundstep's answer:
I'm a solo developer with 50+ started projects and less than 10 shipped. I realized the problem was never motivation or skill. It was the lack of a system that forced me to validate ideas before building, stop adding scope mid-project, and actually decide when something is done. I couldn't find a tool that did this, so I built one. FoundStep came from my own graveyard of abandoned projects.
Foundstep's answer:
Next.js, React, TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, and Node.js. The frontend is built with Next.js 15 using the App Router. The UI uses shadcn/ui components. The backend runs on Node.js with a REST API.
Foundstep's answer:
Most project tools give you a blank canvas and let you organize however you want. FoundStep does the opposite. It forces you through a fixed lifecycle: validate your idea, decide if it's worth building, lock your scope, and ship. You can't skip steps. If you want to add something after locking scope, you have to unlock it and write a reason that gets logged permanently. That friction is the point. It stops scope creep before it kills the project.
Foundstep's answer:
Tools like Notion, Linear, and Trello are built for teams and give you full flexibility. That flexibility is exactly why solo developers never finish anything. FoundStep removes the flexibility on purpose. It has a 7-step validation questionnaire so you don't build bad ideas, scope locking so you stop adding features mid-build, and a permanent log of every time you broke your own rules. No other tool does this. It's not a better project manager. It's a system that makes you ship.
Foundstep's answer:
Solo developers and indie hackers who start side projects but rarely finish them. People with 10+ repos collecting dust. Developers who code nights and weekends, don't have time to set up complex tools, and need a process that holds them accountable without adding overhead.