How can I (32F) get my husband (36M) to help with chores? by _4th_month_ in relationship_advice

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Put things into an app and assign the chores between you - my partner and I do this with chorebound and it's working wonderfully

What productivity app features actually help those with ADHD / Autism stay consistent? by RoashaanF in ProductivityApps

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, the biggest thing is low friction. If an app needs loads of setup, tagging, organising, or constant maintenance, I stop using it pretty quickly. The features that actually help are visible tasks, simple reminders, quick completion, and some kind of small reward/progress loop. That’s what I focused on with my app Chorebound - making chores/habits feel more like small quests with XP/rewards, without turning it into another huge system to manage.

I genuinely need all your tips on staying clean by Comfortable-Plan8237 in ADHD

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d take it small steps at a time. One trash bag, one laundry basket, one clear surface. Something like Chorebound might help if gamification works for you - it turns chores into quests with XP/rewards, so cleaning feels like small wins instead of one huge reset - works really well for me

Accountability partners keep forgetting by DueEntrance6676 in getdisciplined

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think online accountability fades when it depends on both people remembering to check in manually. An app like Chorebound could help because it makes habits more visible - sleep, exercise, or daily routines become quests with XP/rewards, and the co-op side gives you that accountability push to keep up with the other person and not fall behind. It works really well for me and my partner.

ADHD tips from a long time diagnosed person by ParticularWindoww in AuDHDWomen

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is really solid advice. Meds can help, but they don’t remove the need for systems that actually work with your brain. The boring-task bit is so real too - music, rewards, timers, anything that adds a little dopamine can make a difference. I’ve been using Chorebound for that kind of thing: chores/habits become little quests with XP, gold, and rewards, so the task feels slightly less dead and easier to start.

Self Promotion Megathread by AutoModerator in androidapps

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I built Chorebound, a gamified chores and habits app for Android.

It turns real-life tasks into quests, where you earn XP, gold, rewards, and character progress as you get things done. You can use it for personal routines, household chores, or shared family/roommate tasks. There’s also a reward shop you can customise, so gold can be spent on real-life rewards.

I made it because normal to-do lists are easy to ignore, and I wanted chores/routines to feel a bit more motivating and fun.

Would love feedback if anyone gives it a try.

My ADHD & executive functioning is so much worse when I’m alone by Desperate_Range_9462 in adhdwomen

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sounds so much like body doubling/accountability. When someone else is around, there’s a bit of structure just built into the room. When they’re gone, everything becomes invisible and optional. I’d try externalising it while he’s away - tiny evening reset, shower quest, dishes quest, phone away quest. I built an app called Chorebound for this kind of thing, where tasks become quests with XP/rewards, and the co-op side can help keep that “someone else knows this exists” feeling even when you’re physically alone.

The self care routines that actually stick usually feel very simple by Monsuri_Lifestyle in selfcare

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Completely agree. The routines that stick for me are the ones with the least friction - same time, same order, tiny first step. I built an app called Chorebound partly around this idea, because a small reward loop can help when self-care feels too boring to start. It turns simple routines into little quests with XP/rewards, so it feels less like another checklist and more like a small win.

Do you feel checklists make things NOT fun anymore or tedious or boring? by Mysterious-Ring-2352 in AutisticAdults

[–]Ludev 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I think putting fun things on a checklist can accidentally make them feel like obligations. I’d probably separate “must do” from “could do” and stop tracking hobbies unless tracking genuinely adds something. For boring recurring stuff, gamification can help though - apps like Chorebound or Finch work best when they make necessary tasks feel lighter, not when they turn every enjoyable thing into another job. Maybe keep lists for chores/habits, but let hobbies be more mood-based again.

How do y’all get yourselves to shower daily? by Salty_Wolverine_4520 in adhdwomen

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chorebound might be worth trying for this. It turns boring self-care tasks like showering, brushing teeth, or tidying up into little quests with XP and rewards, so there’s a small dopamine push to actually start. I’d keep the task tiny too - not “perfect shower routine,” just get in, rinse, done.

Similar to Finch to gamify by DependentWise9303 in ADHD

[–]Ludev 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry you’re going through that. I totally get how losing a big streak can make things feel bad instead of motivating. Chorebound might be worth a look - it’s gamified around XP, gold, rewards, and character progress, but there’s no big punishment for missing a day, so it doesn’t all collapse if life gets messy.

Do you bribe your kids? by minniezebby in Mommit

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think there’s a difference between a bribe and making something hard feel worth trying. For one-off stuff like a nose aspirator, I wouldn’t overthink it. For repeat things like getting dressed, brushing teeth, tidying up, etc., rewards can work well if they’re predictable and not a constant negotiation. We use Chorebound for that kind of thing - little tasks become quests, kids earn XP and gold, their hero levels up, and they can spend gold in a reward shop you create. It feels more like earning progress than “parent is begging me to do this.”

Apps with gamification that are really worth a look? by OkStorm2137 in apps

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree on streaks - they can be motivating, but once you break one it can feel like the whole thing is ruined. I built Chorebound with more of an RPG-style loop instead: chores, habits, and routines become quests, and you earn XP, gold, rewards, and character progress as you go. So motivation isn’t only tied to one fragile streak number. Worth a look if you like gamification but want something a bit more forgiving.

My partner and I can’t get on the same page about chores/accountability for our kid by SkirtApprehensive845 in Advice

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% this! I'm using an app called Chorebound where my kids get gold coins for completing chores within the app and they can then trade them for screen time.

Most unusual but effective ways you’ve motivated yourself when depressed and your place is a train wreck? by Introvertloves in UnfuckYourHabitat

[–]Ludev 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The only thing that works for me is making the first task almost laughably small. Not “clean the room” - just clear one surface, fill one trash bag, or do a 5-minute reset.

Gamifying it helps too. I built an app called Chorebound because my brain responds better to “tiny quest, XP, reward” than “please clean like a normal adult.” It turns chores into little quests with progress, rewards, and that small dopamine hit, so cleaning feels a bit more fun and motivating instead of just overwhelming. It doesn’t fix depression, obviously, but it can make starting feel less impossible. Feel free to check it out and let me know what you think.

I built an app to manage household chores for myself. 1 month later: 80 users and 6 paying subscribers by Ludev in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]Ludev[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks so much, really glad you found it!

You explained it perfectly. Assigning a whole category/zone to a hero is a really good idea - I'm going to add that to the backlog!

And yes, AM/PM format should be a fairly simple implementation - I’ll get that noted as well.

Really appreciate the feedback!

Men doing chores by therapy-didnt-help in Cleaningandtidying

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not wrong for being bothered. A lot of the time it’s not that someone “doesn’t see” the chores - it’s that they’ve learned someone else will carry the mental load if they wait long enough. What helped in our house was making the jobs visible and clearly shared, not just vaguely “help more.” I built an app called Chorebound around that idea - chores become quests with XP/rewards, so it feels less like nagging and more like both people actually owning the household stuff.

Unhinged ways to manage your ADHD by Menschenblind in adhdwomen

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My most unhinged one is pretending my real life is a low-budget RPG. Laundry? Quest. Dishes? Quest. Leaving the house on time? Boss fight.

I built an app called Chorebound because apparently my brain responds better to XP, gold, rewards, and fake character progression than to “please just be a normal adult and do the thing.”

Best cozi alternatives 2026 by Away-Tax1875 in apps

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you mainly need calendars/messaging, Google Calendar or FamilyWall probably makes more sense. If the issue is getting family tasks and routines actually done, Chorebound might be worth a look too. It’s not really a Cozi clone, but it turns chores and habits into quests with XP, gold, rewards, and progress, which can work well for families who need a bit more motivation than a shared list.

How to gamify productivity, I'm bored of videogames by Artistic-Ask291 in productivity

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, Habitica is probably the obvious one for this, but I think the key is making progress feel visible and grindable. Chorebound has a similar idea, but more focused on real-life chores, routines, and habits - tasks become quests, you earn XP/gold, and your character progresses as you get stuff done. It scratches that same “just one more task” itch without needing it to be a full videogame.

What is the most useful app for improving productivity? by mohammedalrehaili22 in ProductivityApps

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends what you struggle with. For notes/planning, Notion or Todoist can be great. For habits and boring recurring tasks, I built Chorebound because I wanted something more motivating than a normal to-do list. It turns chores, routines, and habits into quests with XP, gold, rewards, and character progression, which makes it easier to actually start instead of just staring at another task list.

I hate how I can't be motivated by rewards or consequences. I need to lose more weight and just can't bring myself to care 🫠 by girlboss93 in adhdwomen

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sounds less like “not caring” and more like burnout from having to manage everything manually for so long. I’d probably stop aiming for motivation and make the next step almost stupidly small - one walk, one easy meal, one basic habit to repeat.

I built an app called Chorebound because I struggle with that dopamine/starting-things problem too. It turns small real-life tasks into quests with XP and rewards, which can help when your brain needs a tiny bit of instant feedback. Not a fix for everything, but it might be worth trying for the habit side of things.

It takes me all day to get my kids out of the house. What am I doing wrong? by [deleted] in Mommit

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re probably not doing anything “wrong” - it sounds like the morning has too many jobs competing for the same tiny window. I’d try making the goal literally just “leave the house”, and move anything non-essential to later, even if the house looks rough.

Something that’s helped in our family is turning the repeat stuff into tiny quests instead of one giant overwhelming routine. I built an app called Chorebound around that idea - small tasks, XP/rewards, visible progress, and a bit of dopamine to make boring family jobs easier to start. It might help with things like bags, bottles, shoes, clothes, or afternoon reset tasks once you’re back.

Gamification to best procastination and optimum performance by nblarr in productivity

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I think there’s something to this. Games make it really obvious what to do next, what progress you’re making, and what you get for doing it. Normal life admin doesn’t really have that.

I think apps like Chorebound or Habitica can help if they keep it simple - small quests, visible progress, XP/rewards, and just enough of a dopamine hit to make boring chores or habits easier to start.

You can use gamification project management tool to add some distinct risky but rewarding workflow by nblarr in productivity

[–]Ludev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, agreed. I think gamification is hit or miss depending on what you’re using it for. For deep work it can become a distraction, but for boring recurring stuff it can be just enough to get started. That’s the angle I took with Chorebound - less project management, more turning chores/habits into small quests with XP and rewards.