Quit Gaming. Rebuild Your Life.
Zend uses Apple Screen Time to block the apps that pull you back in, while guiding you to build new habits, track your streak, and stay accountable.
iOS app in private beta. Screen Time / Family Controls required.
Next lock:
Tonight • 7:00 PM – 11:00 PM
Games and distracting apps are blocked during this window so you can focus on what actually matters.
- Custom focus schedules (work, study, sleep)
- Per‑app blocking using Apple Screen Time
- Clean streak tracking & relapse logging
How Zend works
1. Choose what to block
Using Apple’s Family Controls APIs, you select games and distracting apps that you want to limit. Zend never installs a VPN and does not sell your data.
2. Schedule focus blocks
Set recurring “gaming lock” windows for work, school, and sleep. During an active block, Screen Time prevents you from opening the selected apps.
3. Build new habits
Inside the app, you’ll track your clean streak, log cravings or relapses, and complete small daily habits that rebuild focus, health, and relationships.
Privacy & safety
Zend uses Apple’s Screen Time / Family Controls framework to enforce app limitations. This means blocking happens at the system level, controlled by iOS, rather than via insecure workarounds.
We do not sell personal data. Any analytics we collect are only used to improve your experience and are stored securely.
- No VPN or configuration profiles
- Uses Apple’s official Screen Time APIs
- Parents can configure blocks on a child’s device where permitted
- You can revoke access at any time from iOS settings
Early access
Zend is currently in a private beta on iOS. If you’d like to be notified when it’s available on the App Store, leave your email below and we’ll reach out.
This form is a placeholder for now – you can wire it to your preferred email / CRM later.
Contact
For questions about Zend, Screen Time, or data handling, email support@zend.now.
Zend is an independent project focused on helping people reduce compulsive gaming and reclaim time for deep work, health, and real‑life relationships.