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Saami abbas Khan
Saami abbas Khan

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My Indie App Got Quarantined on itch.io — and I’m Opening It Up to the Dev Community

A few days ago, something unexpected happened.

I published a small indie project on itch.io — a lightweight, offline habit-tracking app I built for people who want fewer distractions and more consistency.

Within hours, the page was automatically placed under quarantine for additional review. No takedown, No warning.

Just… quarantine.


🧠 What the App Is (and Isn’t)

Focus & Grow is a fully offline Windows habit tracker.

  • No accounts
  • No ads
  • No trackers
  • No background network activity

Tech stack

  • TypeScript for app logic
  • Tauri (Rust) for packaging
  • Distributed as a zipped Windows .exe
  • Includes a clear README explaining usage and intent

Nothing obfuscated. Nothing hidden.


🤔 Why This Probably Happened

If you’ve shipped a Windows executable before, you know the struggle:

  • Unsigned .exe
  • New project with no reputation
  • Automated security heuristics doing their thing

I completely understand why platforms do this — but it raises a real question:

How do indie developers establish trust when starting from zero?


🧪 Why I’m Sharing This Here

I’ve already contacted itch.io for a manual review.

In the meantime, I’m doing the most transparent thing I can:

Opening the project up to the dev community.

  • Curious? Take a look.
  • Cautious? Inspect it.
  • Been through this before? Share your experience.

Feedback, comments, or even just engagement genuinely help — both for improving the app and for signaling legitimacy.


🔗 The Project

The app is called Focus & Grow — a simple habit tracker designed to stay out of your way.

If you check it out and have thoughts, I’d love to hear them.


Building in public isn’t always comfortable — but it’s worth it.

Let’s talk.

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