Fella vs OFFTIME

Fella vs OFFTIME:
one unlock or a physical key?

OFFTIME can place app access behind a QR code or NFC tag stored somewhere else. Fella stays entirely on the iPhone and allows one automatic 5-minute unlock per day.

OFFTIME and Fella both try to solve the same weakness in ordinary app limits: the override is too close. OFFTIME moves the decision into the physical world. You start or end blocks with a QR code or NFC tag, then place that key somewhere inconvenient enough to interrupt an impulsive check.

Fella keeps the barrier inside software but limits how often it opens. Selected iPhone apps remain blocked all day. One emergency unlock provides five minutes of access, and the apps lock again automatically afterward.

The choice is between distance and scarcity. OFFTIME makes access possible when you physically reach the key or when a configured timer ends. Fella makes access possible once per day, wherever you are, without requiring a separate object.

At a glanceFellaOFFTIME
Core approachAlways-on software blockQR/NFC-triggered blocking profiles
How access returnsOne 5-minute daily unlockScan the physical key or wait for a timer
Schedules and timersNoYes
ProfilesOne selected-app ruleMultiple work, study, or bedtime profiles
InsightsNo analytics-led experienceWeekly and monthly insights
Hardware requiredNoAny suitable printed QR code or NFC tag for physical mode
Part 1

How OFFTIME's physical barrier works

OFFTIME lets you choose distracting apps or categories and connect the block to a physical trigger. The trigger can be a printed QR code or NFC tag placed in a drawer, hallway, kitchen, office, or another location away from the habitual scrolling spot.

The extra movement is the intervention. Opening a settings screen takes seconds and can happen without fully noticing. Walking to another room and scanning a key turns the override into a deliberate action with a visible cost.

OFFTIME also offers more than physical unlocking. Its current listing describes stopwatch and timer modes, reusable blocking profiles, recurring schedules, different difficulty settings, and focus-hour insights. It can function as a conventional scheduled blocker as well as a physical one.

Part 2

How Fella creates friction without a tag

Fella does not depend on where you placed an object. The same rule follows the iPhone through work, travel, weekends, and bedtime. Selected apps stay closed, while the one emergency unlock remains available if a real need appears away from home.

The cost is less flexibility. You cannot tap a tag at the desk to begin a two-hour work session and scan it again when work ends. Fella does not create profiles for different places or schedules for different parts of the week.

Instead, the block is the permanent baseline. This is useful when the problem is not limited to a location. If Instagram is distracting at the desk, on the sofa, in bed, and on the train, an all-day rule avoids gaps between physical setups.

Part 3

The practical tradeoffs of physical app blocking

A physical key can be extremely effective when the environment is stable. Leaving an NFC tag near the front door can keep evening scrolling locked until you intentionally walk back to it. A desk tag can turn focus into a repeatable arrival ritual.

Physical systems also create logistical questions. The key must be registered, placed somewhere helpful, and available when you intend to end the block. Travel, shared spaces, a moved tag, camera access for QR scanning, or an urgent need away from the key can complicate the routine.

Fella avoids object management but accepts a universal compromise. The emergency unlock works anywhere, which is safer for occasional genuine needs, but it is also nearby when temptation appears. Its protection comes from the unlock being short and unavailable for a second round that day.

Part 4

Who should choose Fella or OFFTIME?

Choose OFFTIME if physical distance changes your behavior. It is the stronger fit for intentional work sessions, phone-free rooms, bedtime routines, multiple profiles, scheduled focus, and people who like a tangible start-and-stop ritual.

Choose Fella if you want the block to remain active across locations without carrying or placing a key. It is better suited to selected apps you want closed throughout the day with one small, predictable exception.

Consider the failure mode you actually have. If you keep ending software sessions, move the key out of reach with OFFTIME. If you keep forgetting to start sessions or leave schedules uncovered, Fella's always-on default may be more reliable.

Fella vs OFFTIME FAQ

OFFTIME can use a physical QR code or NFC tag to start or end configurable blocking sessions. Fella keeps selected apps blocked all day and provides one five-minute software unlock per day.

OFFTIME can work with a printed QR code or a compatible NFC tag. Its App Store listing also describes timers, schedules, and manual controls, so physical hardware is not the only available approach.

A timer-based block can end when its configured duration expires. Physical-key setups can require scanning the registered QR code or NFC tag to restore access.

No. Fella does not use a physical key or multiple profiles. Its core model is all-day selected-app blocking with one emergency five-minute unlock.

Fella is simpler when moving between locations because it does not depend on a separate key. OFFTIME can still work while traveling, but a physical setup requires bringing or recreating access to the registered QR code or NFC tag.