Over 200k people are using it, which suggests something's clicking. The 4.8 rating backs that up. The natural language processing handles typical task management stuff — lists, reminders, scheduling — but also some less common tricks. You can snap a photo of a flyer or invitation and it'll extract the event details automatically. Location-based reminders trigger when you're near specific places. Friend-to-friend reminders let you ping someone else through the system.
The cross-platform access means everything syncs. Start a list on WhatsApp, check it in Telegram, finish it in the web dashboard. There's a memory trunk feature for file storage and a daily briefing that surfaces what needs attention. Google Workspace integration pulls in calendar events and contacts. The autopilot email drafting generates responses based on context from your conversations with the AI.
Does it actually work reliably? The user base size and rating suggest yes, but conversational AI can misinterpret commands. Natural language is messy. If you say "remind me about that thing next Tuesday" without prior context, it might stumble. The facts don't specify accuracy rates or error handling, so there's some trust involved. Works great until it doesn't.
The multi-calendar integration could get complicated depending on how many services you're juggling. Syncing issues between Google Calendar, Outlook, and Apple Calendar aren't rare in this space. The facts don't detail limits on file storage in the memory trunk or how long-term memory actually retains information. No mention of offline functionality either, which matters if you're texting commands without internet access.
Three tiers start at $3 monthly if you pay annually. That's the Origin plan. Supernova runs $6 monthly on annual billing and includes everything — unlimited reminders, the memory trunk, multi-calendar setup, friend reminders, long-term memory, daily briefings, image extraction, the full dashboard, and Google Workspace hooks. It's flagged as most popular. Big Bang costs $18 monthly annually. The annual plans are half off monthly rates, and there's a six-month-free promotion running. Fourteen-day money-back guarantee applies. Entry price is low enough to test without much risk.
Monthly billing doubles the cost across all tiers if you don't want to commit yearly. No free plan exists, but there's a trial period to kick the tires.
Who benefits most? Anyone drowning in tabs and apps. If you're already living in WhatsApp or Telegram for personal communication, this slots in without friction. Professionals juggling multiple calendars and constant reminders will find value in the centralization. The friend reminder feature works for small teams or households coordinating tasks. Less useful if you prefer visual project management boards or need heavy collaboration features. This is personal productivity, not team project tracking.
The image action feature is particularly useful. Snapping a conference schedule or wedding invite and having tasks auto-generated saves steps. But the real draw is reducing context switching with you're already checking messages. Might as well manage your life there too.