DEV Community

Brandon James
Brandon James

Posted on • Originally published at vyrse.app

I built a Bible app for skeptics — here's what I learned about building for an underserved audience

The gap nobody was filling

Every Bible app in existence is built for believers. YouVersion has 500 million downloads. Olive Tree, Bible Gateway, Logos — all of them assume you come to the text with faith.

But 42% of Americans have deconstructed the faith of their youth (Barna, 2024). 151 million Americans are "Bible disengaged" — an all-time high. There are millions of people who want to engage critically with the Bible and there is nothing built specifically for them.

That's the gap Vyrse fills.

What Vyrse actually is

Vyrse is a social Bible reader built for skeptics, atheists, agnostics, and people who are deconstructing their faith. Here's what makes it different:

"See Receipts" — every verse has scholarly annotations sourced from real biblical academics: Bart Ehrman, Robert Alter, Dead Sea Scrolls scholarship. Not opinion. Not apologetics. Actual peer-reviewed academic criticism of the text, surfacing contradictions, historical problems, and moral issues.

Verse-level debates — you can start or join a debate on any specific verse. Real back-and-forth on the text itself, not just general discussion.

4 translations side by side — KJV, NIV, ESV, ASV. Because wording matters enormously when you're analyzing a text critically.

70+ glossary terms decoded in plain language — inerrancy, canon, exegesis, hermeneutics — so you don't need a theology degree to follow the conversation.

Hot topic collections — the flood, slavery, hell, womanhood, the resurrection. Pre-curated dives into the most contested parts of the Bible.

The audience insight that changed how I think about products

The conventional wisdom is: build for an audience that's eager to pay. The deconstruction audience is massive, engaged, intellectually hungry, and deeply underserved by every existing tool.

When someone leaves their faith, they often want to understand what they left. They want receipts. They want to be able to point to a verse and say "look, a real scholar agrees this is a problem." YouVersion will never give them that. Vyrse exists to give them exactly that.

The technical stack

Vyrse is a web app built with a focus on mobile-first UX. The annotation system pulls from a curated scholarly database — sourcing and verifying citations from academic works was one of the harder parts of the build.

The social layer (debates, community) runs on a real-time architecture so arguments stay live and fast.

What I'd tell other builders

The most valuable thing you can do is find an audience that is actively frustrated by the existing options and build exactly what they wish existed. Skeptics and ex-Christians don't have a single tool built for them in a space with 500M+ downloads on the other side. That asymmetry is your opportunity.


If you're skeptical, deconstructing, or just intellectually curious about the Bible — try it: vyrse.app

Happy to answer questions in the comments about the build, the audience research, or the annotation system.

Top comments (0)