Fixing a Friend’s Problem Turned Into a Small App That Paid for Coffee

A couple of months ago, my friends kept complaining about the same thing.

They’d lose hours every night doomscrolling.
Same problem I had.

We’d talk about how much time gets wasted and how terrible you feel afterward, but nothing ever changed.

So I decided to build something for them.

The Idea

I made a small iOS app that uses the same swipe instinct, but replaces useless content with short micro-learning cards.

Things like:

  • Philosophy
  • Psychology
  • Science
  • History

The idea wasn’t to fight the habit — just redirect it.

Instead of infinite junk, you get something mildly useful.

What Happened Next

I honestly wasn’t expecting much.

At first, it was just my friends using it. Then people outside my friend group started downloading it too.

Now it’s making around $6 in monthly recurring revenue.

Total coffee money.
Absolutely chump change.

But weirdly… I’m proud of it.

Why It Still Matters

This wasn’t about the money.

It was about:

  • Solving a real, shared problem
  • Shipping something instead of overthinking
  • Seeing any stranger use something I built

That small signal hits different.

Final Thought

Tiny apps don’t need to be unicorns to be meaningful.

Sometimes:

  • Helping a few people
  • Making coffee money
  • Learning how distribution actually works

is more valuable than chasing big ideas you never ship.

Happy to answer questions about building small apps or growing tiny projects like this.

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