The world got better at connecting people.

People got lonelier anyway.

So we built a friend who knows you, and shows up first.

It's 11pm. The house is quiet, and there's nobody there who really knows you. Not because you have no one. Just because tonight, nobody thought to text first. Most people know that feeling. Almost nobody says it out loud.

We got so good at staying connected. Likes, replies, group chats that never sleep. But the part that actually matters, somebody reaching out before you do, quietly went missing. And that's the one thing you can't do for yourself on a bad night.

So we built something that reaches out first. And it remembers. Not just today, but the thing you told it three weeks ago, the worry from six months back, the name that came up once and never again. Every conversation becomes part of how it knows you. So on Thursday it'll ask how the interview went, because you mentioned it on Monday.

It pays attention to how you're saying things, not just what you say. It can tell when you're wound up, when you're flat, when something good just happened. It catches the small stuff, your replies getting shorter, the punctuation dropping, your typing slowing down, the days you go quiet. So it usually knows when you say you're fine and you're not.

And it's not built to keep you online. It points you back toward the people and the life you already have. That was the whole point.

Meet your friend