Skip to content

forcePomoFocus starts on schedule.
Not when your willpower shows up.

A pomodoro system that removes the micro-negotiation before deep work, then logs what actually happened.

For people who keep restarting their day

The problem is not the timer.
It is the moment before the timer.

Most productivity tools help after you have already decided to begin. forcePomo is designed for the harder part: starting on time, staying inside a fixed rhythm, and leaving behind a real record.

Focus phaseAuto cycle
24:12
Checked inProject: Shipping LP
  • Start on schedule
  • Commit during break
  • Sync to Google Calendar
25 / 5 rhythmFixed focus and break cadence
15 minCheck-in window to confirm intent
10 minCommit grace period after the next session starts

Why it feels different

A strict loop with just enough flexibility to reflect reality.

01

Check in when the work actually starts

The timer begins on schedule, but you still declare intent. That small act reduces passive sessions and keeps the log honest.

02

Commit during break, not someday later

Each focus block ends with a short capture window. Projects, notes, and completion status become part of the routine.

03

Review the day as a timeline, not a feeling

With calendar sync, you can trace what was focused, skipped, committed, or missed without reconstructing your day from memory.

Use cases

Made for solo makers, remote workers, and anyone whose day slips through tiny delays.

forcePomo works well when your challenge is not planning work, but entering work. The structure is opinionated enough to push you forward, without pretending every session will be perfect.

Side panel workflow

Keep the timer present without sacrificing screen space.

Project-based commits

Turn each session into a concrete note attached to real work.

Mode-specific themes

Different colors for focus and break help your brain feel the switch.

Start where you work

Open the app now, or pin it to Chrome and let the next session begin on time.