Pre-launch waitlist

Progress before screens.

Habit Stacker is a tactile routine object that helps children move through mornings, after-school resets, and evening wind-downs with less prompting, more ownership, and screen time that arrives at the end.

See how it works
Waitlist members hear first about the first batch, launch timing, and early access.
How it works

Three drawer states, one calm routine.

Lock the device away, make the next step visible, then open screen time only after the routine is complete.

Lock

Start by taking the screen out of the conversation, so the routine begins from a clear boundary.

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Progress

Each completed step reveals what comes next, so progress feels concrete and self-directed.

See the rationale

Open

Screen time becomes the finish line rather than the interruption.

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Reset

At the end, the system resets quietly for tomorrow and continues to belong in the room.

See launch details
Why it works
Small rituals create durable habits.
01

A physical cue is easier to trust than another reminder.

The locked device sets the expectation upfront, lowering negotiation before the routine starts.

02

Visible progress keeps the next action clear.

Finite, tangible steps help children hold momentum and build ownership without constant prompting.

03

Reward follows rhythm.

When screen time arrives after the sequence, the habit loop stays intact and the routine ends more cleanly.

Built for the points in the day where families need less friction and more follow-through: before school, after school, and before bed.

Morning rhythm Start with fewer reminders. A visible first step helps the day begin without the same repeated prompting.
After school Hold the line more calmly. The object carries part of the routine, so parents are not forced to be the only enforcer of what happens next.
Evening wind-down End with a clearer payoff. Closing the loop with earned access gives the day a cleaner ending and strengthens the pattern for tomorrow.
Early signals

What families respond to first.

The same strengths keep surfacing early: clearer boundaries, less friction, and a routine children can read for themselves.

“One clear next step is easier to follow than a string of reminders.”
Clarity What the sequence solves
“It needs to feel like part of the home, not another loud plastic gadget.”
Home fit Why the object stays usable
“Reward works best when it follows completion instead of interrupting the routine.”
Reward timing Why the loop holds
Launch

The first batch is being shaped with intention.

The release plan stays focused: a small first run, waitlist-first communication, and a launch path that can follow the strongest fit.

01

First batch

A limited first release for early households who want to help shape how Habit Stacker rolls out.

02

Purpose

Learn how the product performs in real routines before scaling production further.

03

Access

Waitlist members hear first when pricing, early access, and first-batch details are confirmed.

04

Release path

Kickstarter and direct launch remain open while the team chooses the strongest route for the first release.

FAQ

Questions families ask first.

Short answers, kept clear.

Is Habit Stacker a screen-time ban? +
No. Habit Stacker creates a routine before the screen, then lets access happen at the end.
Who is it designed for? +
Families who want more predictability, more independence, and less daily friction around screens.
What happens when the stack is complete? +
The final state opens access, so screen time can begin after the routine is done.
How will the first release work? +
Join the waitlist to hear when first-batch details, pricing, and release timing are announced.
Join the waitlist

Join the waitlist for first-batch access.

Be first to hear about launch timing, pricing, and early access for the first release.