Habits don't run
on willpower. They run
on proof.
Every day, one small challenge. Snap a photo. AI verifies on the spot. Your friends see your streak — and you see theirs.
Daily, with your people.
Kleios is a habit app where the receipt is a photo, the referee is AI, and the audience is your friends.
A challenge, every morning.
One small task, from a category you chose. Read 10 pages. Walk a mile. Photograph something blue. Skip a day? It breaks your streak — not your week.
Show it, don't say it.
Snap a photo as proof. AI checks it on the spot — usually in about five seconds. Pass, and the day is yours. Fake it, and AI knows.
Your people watch.
Friends and groups see your photos as you finish. You see theirs. The accountability is built in — and the photos make it kind of beautiful.
Track everything.
Forget by Wednesday.
Most habit apps run on willpower. They give you a checkbox, a streak meter, a green dot, and quietly hope you don't quit them by next Wednesday. Most people quit them by next Wednesday.
Kleios runs on proof. Each morning brings one small thing. You do it, you take a photo, AI looks at the photo, and your friends see the receipt. The willpower isn't yours alone — it's distributed across the people who know you.
We don't think habits are heroic. We think they're boring. The boring middle is the point.
Do it as a group.
Make a group with friends, your roommates, the people from book club. Everyone gets the same challenge, every day. Photos go to the same feed. So does the banter.
- Same daily challenge for everyone in the group
- A shared feed, just for the group
- Streaks per person, leaderboard per group
You pick what's in.
Kleios only gives you challenges from categories you opt into. Don't want 'meditate for 20 minutes'? Don't pick mindfulness. The categories you choose are the only places your daily challenge can come from.
- Reading, exercise, cooking, wake-up — more coming
- Switch categories on or off anytime
- Difficulty calibrates to your streak
The AI is fair.
We trained the verifier to be a generous referee: it looks for evidence the challenge happened, not a perfect, polished photo. A messy bookshelf, a sweaty selfie, a half-eaten dish — all fine, as long as they're real.
- Verdict in ~5 seconds, on average
- Tells you what it saw, not just pass/fail
- Re-shoot on the spot if it's not satisfied
Tomorrow can be day one.
Free in beta. Photos and friends only — no ads, no inbox cruft, no dopamine slot machines. Just one small thing, every day, with the people who know you.