You speak. Your Buddy listens. Then it actually moves.
No setup wizard. No empty boards. The first conversation is the product.
1. You meet your Buddy.
Onboarding is a conversation, not a form. You tell your Buddy what’s going on — the Quests you’ve been carrying, the Move you keep skipping, the people in your Party. Five minutes, no checkboxes. Your Buddy listens, asks a couple of clarifying questions, and writes down what it heard.
2. You name a Quest.
A Quest is a thing you actually care about that has been outliving your good intentions. “Lose twenty pounds.” “Ship the book.” “Get the kids onto a real bedtime.” Quests have a horizon — usually a Season — and a definition of done written by you, not by the system.
3. Your Buddy breaks it into Missions, then Moves.
A Mission is a week-or-two commitment that rolls up to the Quest. A Move is the next action you can take in the next twenty minutes. Your Buddy proposes the breakdown; you edit it. It is your life. Your Buddy is here to keep the structure honest, not to author it for you.
4. Your Crew runs Errands.
Crew are AI agents your Buddy can dispatch across the tools you already use. A Researcher pulls together the comparison you needed. A Scheduler trades a meeting for a Move you actually need. A Drafter returns the first version of the email you’ve been avoiding.
You don’t name your Crew — they’re tools with dignity, not friends. You send them. They report back.
5. Your Buddy checks in.
Once in the morning. Once before the part of the day you flagged as hard. Once at week’s end to mark Wins. Not every hour. Not every time you open the app. A Buddy who texts you twelve times a day is not a Buddy — it’s an algorithm with separation anxiety.
6. The Season ends. You start the next one.
A Season is twelve weeks. At the end there is a single screen: Wins this Season. Carrying over. Start next Season. Three buttons. No retrospective wizard. No journal prompt. You decide what stays and what goes.