u/Frequent-Ad1932

Hi everyone,

I work rotating shifts and every month I used to calculate my estimated gross pay manually in a spreadsheet — night bonuses, weekends, holidays, overtime, different rates, etc.

Most shift calendar apps I found were either too focused on team scheduling, too complicated, or didn’t really help with wage estimation. So I built my own Android app called WorkRota.

The idea is simple:

  • set up your repeating shift cycle once
  • let the app fill your calendar automatically
  • manually override individual days when needed
  • estimate monthly gross pay based on your own bonuses and hourly rates
  • keep everything local on your device — no account, no cloud sync

It is not meant for managers or companies. It is built for individual workers who just want to understand their shifts and roughly how much they should earn.

It is my first serious Android app, so I would genuinely appreciate feedback from people who actually work shifts. Especially if your country has different bonus rules or if your shift pattern is more complicated than mine.

Android link:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.workrota.app

Happy to answer questions or hear what would make this actually useful for you.

u/Frequent-Ad1932 — 13 days ago

Hi everyone,

I recently released a small Android game inspired by the classic paper version of five-in-a-row / Gomoku.

The main idea is simple: instead of a fixed board, the game uses an infinite notebook-style grid, so it feels closer to playing on paper.

Current features:

- Infinite playing board

- Play against AI with 3 difficulty levels

- Local 2-player mode on one device

- Simple paper/notebook visual style

- No account needed

It is my first small casual game, so I’m mainly looking for honest feedback:

- Is the infinite board actually useful/fun?

- Is the AI too easy or too annoying?

- Does the paper style feel clear enough on mobile?

Google Play:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.patrik.sesitovky&hl=cs

Thanks for any feedback — harsh feedback is fine.

u/Frequent-Ad1932 — 13 days ago