Where Effort Becomes Visible.

reddō is a social network for real progress. Log daily effort in seconds, share publicly by default, and use invite-only pods when you want private accountability.

What makes us different

Local-First Data Ownership

Your logs live on your device, not a company database. The server only helps peers connect, so ownership stays with you.

Effort Over Vanity Metrics

Track minutes, difficulty, and real work done in a quick daily log. Progress is measured by effort and consistency, not likes.

Anti-Burnout Streak Design

Missed a day does not destroy your identity. Grace period and recovery credits protect streaks and reduce all-or-nothing pressure.

Public by Default, Pods by Choice

Build in public to gain momentum, then add invite-only pods for private accountability. Open network + focused inner circle in one product.

How It Works

Four simple steps to build consistent habits

01

Log Your Effort

In under 30 seconds, log what you worked on today. Add minutes spent, difficulty level, and an optional mood emoji. That's it — no long posts, no performance pressure.

02

Build in Public

Your logs are public by default, creating a visible trail of consistency. Share your progress without oversharing — let your effort speak for itself.

03

Join or Create Pods

When you want focused accountability, create or join an invite-only pod. Small groups of 3-10 people who see your daily logs and keep you accountable.

04

Track Streaks Gracefully

Miss a day? No panic. Grace periods and recovery credits protect your streak identity. Progress isn't all-or-nothing — it's showing up when you can.

Join the Community

Connect with builders, creators, and anyone committed to consistent effort

Open Network

Your logs are public by default. Share your journey openly and inspire others while building your own momentum.

Private Pods

When you need focused accountability, create or join a pod — a small group of 3-10 people who genuinely support your progress.

No Vanity Metrics

We don't count likes or followers here. Progress is measured by effort and consistency, not social validation.