Hi. I'm Jorge.
I'm paying down a chunk of personal debt — publicly. Roundup is how.
Why this exists
[FILL IN: a few paragraphs in your voice about why you decided to do this publicly. The honest reason, the moment you committed, what makes it feel worth doing in public instead of quietly. Doesn’t need to be polished — readers respond to real, not curated.]
[FILL IN: optionally a line or two about what kind of debt this is at a high level (student loans / credit cards / business / mixed) — or skip if you’d rather stay out of specifics. The point isn’t the category, it’s the commitment.]
How it works
Every day, six bite-size puzzles show up — Connections, Daily Ranking, Hot or Cold, Odd One Out, Anagram, and Daily Trivia. Each takes a minute or two.
For every puzzle a signed-in player completes that day, 2¢ goes toward the debt.
That’s it. No money from you. Just play.
There are a few ways the contribution grows on top of the base 2¢:
- Streak milestones. Hit a 7-day streak in any game and the contribution jumps by 50¢. 30 days → $2. 100 days → $5. 365 days → $10. Every tier hit is on the public ledger.
- Real-world payments. Every paycheck-driven payment I make toward the debt is logged in the same public tracker — timestamped, source-tagged, audit-able. You see what the community engagement generated AND what I contributed, separately.
The total is capped at $500/month from the app side — a real-world ceiling on what I can pay forward each month. Anything earned above that gets credited forward to the next month rather than disappearing.
The promise
100% transparency. Every dollar that reduces the balance shows up on the public tracker. Both streams — community contributions and my own paycheck payments — are logged with dates and sources. The math is open.
No fundraising framing. Roundup isn’t a charity or a nonprofit. The contributions are the operator’s personal commitment toward personal debt — not a tax-deductible cause and not user-funded. The app accepts no payments, tips, or donations. The terms spell this out.
The app is the point. The daily 2¢ accrual is the operator’s commitment; the puzzles are fun on their own.
Where it’s going
[FILL IN: a paragraph about the launch timeline, what you’re building toward, what success looks like. Could be specific (“launch in late June”) or general (“ship it, then keep shipping”). Whatever feels honest.]
Roundup is live. Five short puzzles a day; every play helps pay down the debt.