Discover and own beautiful apps.
The Shelf
Pick a vibe
Software doesn't have to look like software. Browse by the aesthetic that fits your day. Every app on Potchkey lives inside one of these worlds.
Your life should be seeing beauty every single day.
Most software is boring, rote, and looks like every other program. We think that's a tragedy of small moments. The tools you touch a hundred times a day should give something back. Potchkey is a home for the makers who agree, and the people who want to live with what they make.
Made for the web
Not everything needs to be an app. These are real products built on Potchkey that live on a web page — open a link and use them, no download, no app store, no install. Some things are simply better as a website.
Swadisht
A weekly meal planner. Plan your week, build a shopping list, and browse recipes — plan your week, eat well.

Matryoshka
A nested checklist tracker for deals and closings. Parent rows, sub-rows, and live sync keep every workstream in one board.
Website or app?
Building something? Here's a quick gut-check on which one it wants to be.
Lean website
When friction is the enemy and reach is the point.
- People use it now and then — no reason to make them install anything.
- A link is the front door. Shareable, searchable, embeddable, opens instantly.
- It should work everywhere — any device, any OS, nothing to download.
- Updates ship instantly — you publish, everyone has it on refresh.
- It's a tool used in short bursts — planning, browsing, forms, calculators, content.
- You're a small maker who'd rather skip app-store review, fees, and native builds.
Lean app
When it lives on the home screen and digs into the device.
- People reach for it daily and want an icon on the home screen.
- It needs deep device features — camera, GPS, sensors, background tasks.
- Push notifications matter for the core experience.
- It must work fully offline or lean on heavy local data.
- Performance is critical — games, pro creative tools, heavy graphics.
- You want store distribution, discovery, and in-app purchases.
In between? A web page can be installed to the home screen and work offline with notifications (a "progressive web app") — often the best of both for makers, and a great place to start.
About Potchkey
Potchkey Labs is a marketplace for software with a point of view. We started it because the apps we open every day had stopped working for us — they all felt the same, and using them felt like filing paperwork.
So we made a shelf for the other kind. Apps built by people who care how a button feels, whether a workflow actually saves you time, whether opening the thing puts you in a better mood than before. You can buy them, download them, and keep them.
A storefront, a community, and a small argument that the tools you use every day should bring you some joy.
- Keep 85% of every sale
- Free to list, weekly payouts
- Your work, your price, your aesthetic
Vibe coding 101
You don't need to be an engineer to build something useful. Vibe coding is building by describing what you want, looking at what comes back, and nudging it until it works the way you imagined. Here's how Potchkey makers turn an idea into a real, shippable app.
Best practices
The habits that turn "almost" into "done."
- Give context up front. Who it's for, the mood you want, two or three apps you love.
- Work on a copy and save versions. So you can always roll back to the one that felt right.
- Ask for one thing at a time. Stacked requests get muddy; single asks stay sharp.
- Be specific with feedback. Point at the exact thing — "the yellow is too pale," not "make it nicer."
- Look at every change. Preview it, click around, don't ship blind.
- Keep a scrap folder. Screenshots, colors, and snippets you can reuse next time.
- Know the last mile. Stuck at 90%? That's normal — bring in a tinker to finish it.
Settings for Claude
A quick setup that makes the back-and-forth smoother.
- Pick the right model. Use the most capable model for design and tricky logic; a faster one for small edits.
- Give it a project file. A short note on what you're building, your taste, and what's off-limits — it stops repeating yourself.
- Turn on a live preview. Let it open the page and verify changes instead of guessing.
- Use plan mode for big moves. Have it propose the approach before it touches anything.
- Let it remember your preferences. Voice, colors, conventions — set once, reuse forever.
- Review before it goes live. Keep edits visible and approve them; deploy on your say-so.
What does Potchkey mean?
Potchkey means to putter, to fiddle, to tinker — to fuss happily over something until it's just right.
It's the verb for the person who can't leave a thing alone — who keeps tweaking the workflow at midnight, who potchkes with a side project until it finally works exactly right. Less "ship fast," more "get it right and love every minute."
That's exactly what building something you're proud to use feels like. The word made us smile, so we kept it.
- to potchke (v.) — to mess about, tinker, putter, fuss
- a Potchkey — a home for the people who do
Code of Conduct
Everyone's welcome here. Leave your 'tudes at the door.
Potchkey is a place to make useful things and help each other finish them. That only works if it stays kind. So, the house rules:
- Quality has to be on point. This is a place for creators. If it's going on the shelf, make it good — considered, intentional, something people actually want to use. We curate for craft, not clutter.
- Be kind. Critique the work, never the person.
- No gatekeeping. Vibe-coding is coding. Using AI to build is building. Everyone starts somewhere.
- Credit people. Don't pass off someone else's work as yours. Say thanks when a tinker saves your bacon.
- Help when you can. Answer the question, share the trick, leave it better than you found it.
- No harassment, ever. No bigotry, no cruelty, no punching down. Zero tolerance.
- Make things you'd be proud to show. Beauty is the point.
Break the spirit of this and you're out. Otherwise: welcome in, glad you're here.
Say hello
Questions, press, maker inquiries, or just want to talk about software that doesn't make you miserable — we'd love to hear from you.