Most to-do apps let unfinished work rot in an endless list. Daily Command Console rolls it forward, and when something keeps slipping, it makes you face it — commit, delegate, or bury it. Here's how the day actually works.
End the day with something undone and it carries over to the next morning automatically — with a deferral counter that ticks up every time you punt it. You always start the day facing what you actually didn't do, not a blank slate that lets you forget.
After a task has been pushed enough times, it turns into a ghost — a glowing, flickering "you've deferred this 5 times, time to decide" prompt you can't just ignore. There's no fourth option to keep procrastinating. You pick one:
Put it back in play and reset the deferral count — onto your Big 3, Blitz, or Personal list. You're choosing to actually do it.
Type who's taking it. The task moves to Follow-Up, renamed "task → that person," so you chase the handoff instead of the work.
Admit it's not happening. It's gone — but burying a task costs a little XP, so abandoning things isn't free.
Your three must-win priorities for the day. Finish all three and you trigger a 2× XP multiplier on everything else.
The quick-hit work tasks — the things you knock out between the big ones.
Life outside work. The errands, the calls, the things that still matter.
Where delegated tasks live, tagged with who owns them, so nothing falls through the cracks.
Every completed task earns XP and pushes your rank forward. Clearing your Big 3 doubles the haul.
String winning days together. The streak is the thing you won't want to break.
A morning briefing to set the day and an evening review to close it out and bank the win.
Add it to your phone's home screen and desktop — works like a native app, syncs across both.
Talk a task in when typing is too slow. Plus weather on your day at a glance.
They roll over to the next day automatically and a deferral counter ticks up. Nothing silently disappears — the task keeps coming back until you deal with it.
A task you've deferred too many times. It starts haunting you with a "time to decide" prompt and forces one of three choices: commit it back to a list, delegate it to someone, or kill it to the graveyard.
Choose Delegate, type who's taking it, and the task moves to your Follow-Up list renamed "task → that person" so you remember to follow up instead of doing it yourself.
Where killed tasks go. Sending a ghost task to the graveyard means admitting it isn't happening — it clears the task but costs you a little XP, so abandoning things has a small sting.
Yes — every feature, including all six themes, is free.
Plan your Big 3, roll the rest forward, and deal with the ghosts. Win the day — every day.