Track habits with a tweet.

(how 𝕏 users build superhuman consistency )

1. Post on đť•Ź with @xtreeks today

Example of tracking a habit with the Xtreeks habit tracking app.

2. AI automagically tracks your habit!

Xtreeks habit progress grid.

We built đť•Źtreeks for ourselves, but we'll open access if there's enough demand. Join the list below!

Tracking your habits boosts adherence by 42%

Tracking provides visual progress, reinforces accountability, and triggers dopamine rewards for completing tasks. It also keeps goals top-of-mind, builds momentum, and creates a sense of accomplishment, making habits stick.

+42%
Higher habit adherence

Sharing updates increases the likelihood of achieving goals by 76%

People with higher accountability through writing down goals & sharing progress updates improve their chance to succeed by up to 76%.

+76%
More likely to achieve goals

A  habit tracking system makes you 80% more likely succeed.

Habit tracking systems can effectively promote new behaviors and break old habits. Habit apps like đť•Źtreeks make it easy to get started.

+80%
Higher success rate
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Why we made đť•Źtreeks

Hi, I'm Gabe & I'm obsessed with habits đź‘‹

Over the years, I’ve tried dozens of habit apps and hit multiple 1,000+ day streaks. Obsessive? Maybe. Effective? Absolutely.

Back when I was a Director of Product Management at a public tech company, one of my guiding philosophies was to “eat your own dog food”—regularly use your own product. I couldn’t find a habit app that worked, so I hacked together my own system. I logged when I used my product by creating GitHub commits and tracked progress in their commit graph. That simple system kept me consistent for over 1,000 days straight.

Since then, I’ve bounced between habit apps, trying to find one that fits my needs. Right now, I’m juggling three paid apps just to cobble together something halfway functional. But honestly? Nothing really nails it.

For years, I’ve wanted to build my own habit app, but I kept putting it off—knowing how much time it would take and how rusty my coding skills are. Then I hit a breaking point. I realized I’d literally pay $5,000 for a tool that just worked for me. That’s how much this matters to me. I even considered buying one of the habit apps I use for $10,000, but I’d still need to rebuild most of it.

Then it hit me: I’ll never find the perfect app unless I build it myself. So, I called my best friend—who also happens to be one of the best engineers I know—and pitched the idea. Turns out, he’d been looking for a better habit app too. And just like that, 𝕏treeks was born.

We’re keeping it ridiculously simple for version one: tweet to log a habit, and the app will show your progress in a clean, GitHub-style grid. It’s easy to use, with built-in accountability and encouragement since your updates are shared on 𝕏.

Here’s the thing: this app is just for us. But if there’s demand and we get 500 signups, we’ll make it available to everyone. If you’re like me and want a simple, effective habit app to finally reach your goals, 𝕏treeks is what you’ve been waiting for 🙌

- Gabe

Gabriel Mays

Gabe was a Director at GoDaddy and founded two other startups. He was also a Marine Corps Captain, serving combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. He lives with his wife and two kids on Cape Cod, MA. Read more on Gabe's blog.

How đť•Ź users build better habits.

Better habits = better life.