NoStreak is a mentor on Telegram for people stuck in the procrastination–shame loop. One small task a day. A calm check-in at night. And when you miss a day — nothing breaks.
How it works
Most productivity apps hand you the cockpit of a plane. NoStreak hands you one small thing, then gets out of the way.
Not a list. One task, sized to how your week is actually going — sometimes embarrassingly small. That's the point.
A short message asks how the day went. You answer by typing or talking — whatever comes out. No forms, no ratings.
Rough patch? Tomorrow shrinks. On a roll? It holds you back from promising ten things. You never see the math.
Getting started
There is nothing to configure. If you can send a text, you already know how to use it.
That's the install. No account, no email, no app store.
Type or send a voice note — in any language. It gets to know you a little, then you agree on the first tiny task together.
Type /tasks for today's list plus a private link to your own dashboard — add, edit and tick things off there.
Found something confusing? Loved something? Type /fb and your note lands straight in the founder's inbox — and it genuinely steers the roadmap.
Streaks work great — until the first miss. Then the app you downloaded to help you becomes the thing you avoid. That's not a you problem. That's a design problem.
Features
A missed day gets fewer words than a done one. No lecture, no "what happened?", no starting over from zero.
Send voice notes in any language — rambling welcome. It listens to all of it and answers in yours.
Your words come back to you. If you called it "trash day", it asks about trash day — not "your task".
Disappear for a week and you won't return to 14 notifications. The longer you're gone, the quieter it gets — the door stays open.
The counterintuitive part: when you're flying, it keeps tomorrow the same size. Overcommitting today is how tomorrow collapses.
No new app to abandon. A list you can see at /tasks, repeating tasks that never pile up, and an archive of only the things you finished.
Roadmap
The honest version: the beta decides this list. What testers ask for with /fb moves up; what nobody misses gets cut. Here's the current thinking.
FAQ
Yes, while in beta. Later there will be a simple subscription — no ads, no selling your data, ever. If you're in the beta, you'll get a lifetime discount and zero pressure to stay.
No. NoStreak is a mentor for everyday tasks and the shame spiral around them. It's not a substitute for professional help, and it will say so — plainly — if a conversation calls for it.
Because the graveyard of productivity apps is full of apps. You already open Telegram. Voice notes, quick replies, zero setup — it was all already there.
Less than you'd think. Your messages are used in the moment — to size your task, to remember your context — and then let go: raw conversations aren't stored, and voice notes are deleted the second they're transcribed. What's kept is the distilled stuff: your tasks, short memory notes, and whether a check-in was answered. No ad profiles, no data sales, no newsletter. Want everything gone? Just ask in the chat — full deletion, no questions asked.
The honest answer most services won't give you: the small set that is stored sits in a database that the founder operates, and that's true of nearly every app you use — someone always holds the keys. What limits it here: there's no conversation log to read in the first place, the data lives on a managed server (not a laptop), and the AI runs on APIs that don't use your data for training. What improves the mentor over time is anonymous, aggregate patterns — how often small tasks get done, when people go quiet — never your words.
Beta
The bot is open right now — no invite needed while spots last. If it's full when you knock, the bot itself will take your email, and you'll get exactly one message when a spot opens.
One small task a day.
An evening check-in that doesn't judge.
A direct line to the founder (/fb).
A say in the roadmap above.
And what you won't: streaks, badges, points, levels, red bubbles, "we miss you" emails.