Your life, one place.
Reminders in one app. Notes in another. Expenses in a spreadsheet. Books you want to read in a screenshot. Scribbles replaces the chaos with one place that adapts to everything.
Daily Life
Plan your day in 30 seconds.
It's 7:30am. You scribble your day in 30 seconds.
"Call dentist. Pick up dry cleaning. Finish the proposal. Buy Sarah's birthday gift." That's it. No app switching, no dragging cards between columns. Scribbles extracts the tasks, assigns dates where it can, and puts them in your day view. At 6pm you check what's done, scribble tomorrow's priorities, and close the app. Over time, you have a journal of what you actually did — not what you planned to do.
Your partner texts: "We need to get Lily's school forms in by Friday."
You scribble: "Lily school forms — due Friday." Scribbles extracts the deadline and creates a reminder. You also scribble: "Lily's parent-teacher conference — March 28." Your shared "Family" space syncs with your partner. She sees the forms reminder too. When Friday morning comes, it's on both your phones. No "did you remember to..." text. No dropped ball.
Projects & Learning
Everything you're working on. Everything you're reading.
You're planning a two-week trip to Japan.
You create a space called "Japan Trip." Over the next month, you scribble things as you find them: "that ramen place from the YouTube video", a screenshot of a train pass comparison, "Kyoto in cherry blossom season = first week of April." You save an article about hidden temples and highlight the three that sound best. By the time you leave, your trip space has everything — restaurants, routes, bookings, ideas — all in one place instead of scattered across 15 browser tabs and a shared Google Doc.
You just finished a chapter of "Thinking, Fast and Slow."
You highlighted four passages and scribbled "System 1 = my impulse buying habit?" next to one of them. Next Tuesday, Scribbles surfaces a review prompt: "Explain the difference between System 1 and System 2 thinking. Give a personal example." You scribble a quick answer. A month later, when a friend brings up cognitive biases at dinner, you actually remember the details — not just "I read a book about that once."
Relationships & Finances
The small things that matter most.
You just had coffee with your friend Marcus.
You scribble: "Marcus — got promoted to senior PM. Training for a half marathon in October. Mentioned wanting to try that new Thai place on Commercial." Scribbles attaches this to Marcus's Person object. Next time you see him, you pull up his page: last conversation, things he mentioned, his birthday (March 14). You ask about the marathon. He's genuinely surprised you remembered. You didn't — Scribbles did.
You grab lunch. You scribble "pad thai $14.50."
Scribbles creates an Expense object: $14.50, category "Food", today's date. You do this throughout the week — "groceries $67", "gas $55", "Netflix $15.99." At the end of the month, you open your Expenses list. Food: $340. Transport: $180. Subscriptions: $85. No spreadsheet. No receipt photos. Just quick scribbles that became structured data.
Shared Spaces
Stay in sync without the group chat.
It's Sunday. You and your roommate need groceries.
You both have access to a shared "Groceries" list. You scribble "eggs, oat milk, that sriracha mayo" from the couch. She adds "chicken thighs, rice, bell peppers" from the store. Real-time sync. When she picks up the eggs, they're checked off on your end. No group chat. No "did you get my text?" Just a shared list that works.
Built for
Busy professionals
Your work has a system, but your personal life doesn't. Scribbles is the system — without the overhead.
Parents
School forms, doctor appointments, activity schedules, meal planning. One shared space for the whole family's chaos.
Lifelong learners
You read 30 books a year but remember 3. Capture what resonates and actually build on it.
Couples and roommates
Shared grocery lists, household tasks, trip planning. Stay in sync without the group chat.