A suite of accountability tools. Free where it counts. One-time purchase where it doesn't. No subscriptions. No ads. No games.
It started with a story. A fictional woman rebuilding her life from nothing — no money, no safety net, no one in her corner. The kind of story that makes someone want to reach for something different.
That's where the responsibility came in. Writing a story that creates that kind of desire — and not having something real waiting when someone reached for it — would already be a failure. Not a response to failure. A failure built in from the start.
So the tools existed before anyone asked for them. Victis Life for anyone ready to stand on their own two feet. Victis Family for the readers who arrive through the story — where radical accountability meets a voice that believed in you before you believed in yourself.
New chapters on Inkitt while each novel is in preproduction. When a book is complete, paperback and ebook follow — one novel a year.
Victis Life exists because a budget tool, a habit tracker, and a financial clarity system should not cost anything to access. The people who need it most are the ones least able to pay for it.
Victis Family exists because the story created a responsibility. If someone reads about radical accountability and reaches for something real — that thing needs to already be there. Free. No trial. No expiry. No pitch waiting at the end.
The floor doesn't move. That was never a feature. It was the whole point.
Eighty dollars a year to track your own food felt like the wrong answer. Not because the tools weren't worth something — but because the model assumed you'd forget to cancel, or couldn't afford to stop.
So the question became: what if you paid once, owned it forever, and it never asked you again? Not a discount. Not a lifetime deal with an asterisk. Just the thing you paid for, working, for as long as you need it.
$19.99 for the first year. $29.99 after that. Own it forever either way — no subscription, no renewal, no catch. Buy now and you're grandfathered at the launch price for life.
Each app does one thing well. Use one or use all of them — they work independently.
The distance between releases is deliberate — not a marketing rhythm, but room to do the work properly.
These apps are being built alongside a massive slow-burn series — more than a hundred novellas unfolding over years, not months. That pace means parallel deadlines, not stacked ones. Each tool gets its own window: time to finish building, time to run as a web app while early users put it through real daily life, and time to fix what only surfaces when someone actually depends on it.
Victis Life is largely built now — Play Store in six months. Victis Fit is largely built too — a year out. What remains is not feature chasing. It is making sure both are ready before they go public. When someone pays $19.99 once and owns an app forever, they deserve something that has already been lived in — not a beta wearing a price tag.
The six months after Life gives the builder time to polish, gives PWA users time to break things in private, and gives Play Store buyers time to know the free app on its own terms before anything paid appears beside it.
No pressure. No upsell. Two ways to use Victis — both are complete.
Start here. Stay here if you want. No feature is locked behind a guilt trip.
One-time purchase. Own it forever. No monthly fees — ever.
No spam. One email when the apps hit the Play Store. That's it.
These apps are being built in public. If something's wrong, tell us — it gets fixed.