Snap the pile
Photograph the mess; AI turns it into tiny, doable missions.
Unpile is a focus and decluttering tool designed for ADHD brains: when a space gets messy and you freeze, you photograph the overwhelming pile and AI breaks it into 4–6 tiny, roughly five-minute “missions” — so you never have to face the whole task at once.
A timer and a calm on-screen companion keep you company while you work — a gentle stand-in for body-doubling. You earn XP just for starting, and you’re never penalized for stopping. Finishing produces a shareable before/after card: the proof-of-progress that makes the work feel worth it. It’s anti-shame by design — no broken-streak guilt, grace days, and gentle copy throughout — for anyone who freezes when a space gets messy: ADHD adults first, but it speaks to anxiety, burnout, and overwhelm too.
Photograph the mess; AI turns it into tiny, doable missions.
A timer and a companion keep you going — XP for starting, never shame for stopping.
A before/after card celebrates what you did and is yours to share.
No. It’s a focus and decluttering tool designed to be friendly to ADHD brains, but it doesn’t diagnose or treat anything.
Only the pile photo is sent once to an AI service to generate your missions; nothing is stored on a server and there are no accounts.
Nothing bad. There are no broken streaks — Unpile rewards starting, never punishes stopping.
No. Everything lives on your device.
A note on limits: the AI mission breakdown depends on photo clarity — if the AI can’t read the image, a generic starter list is used instead. Reminders require notification permission. And because data is on-device only, it does not sync across devices in v1.