Four apps, each named for its job

The naming system is the map: Win IRL is the parent, and every app is IRL plus a concrete noun. None of them competes with the others — they hand off.

IRL Arena · Compete

Live · App Store submission

IRL Arena turns real-life activity into a friendly competition. Create an arena, set what scores points, log what you actually do, and race your friends and family up the board all month.

It is the one screen in the family that gets people off screens: a chart that gets three kids on their bikes on a random Tuesday, because a race is more provocative than a report card.

Arena keeps score — it does not schedule the game or invent it.

IRL Open · Schedule

In build

Every recurring hangout dies on the fourth week of re-asking the group chat. IRL Open replaces the per-event poll with standing availability: say when you are generally free once, and a solver finds the slot that works for everyone.

The gap it closes is the one between availability and commitment — the reason the poker night, the run club, and the dinner never quite stick.

Open schedules the game. Arena scores it.

IRL Corner · Neighbor

Specced

Most people do not know their neighbors, and the person walking a dog past your house is a stranger. IRL Corner is a private, vouched network for the walkable ring around you — the handful of doors your kids could actually reach on foot.

Faces and names first. Block parties, tool-borrowing, and the small acts of a real neighborhood next. No feed, no strangers, no data broker deciding who counts.

Corner is walkable-distance trust — not a city-wide feed.

IRL Play · Play

Specced

The same walk gets a reason. IRL Play is low-intensity, curiosity-driven outdoor play: daily challenges, short quests along streets you already walk, and waypoints you can leave for a friend to find.

Built for the walkers geocaching left out — retirees, stroller parents, grandparents with grandkids. The same user, different scenery.

Play makes games happen. Arena keeps score.