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Tickle Strip -beta- -developedistraction-

We know you should be fixing that race condition. We know the build is failing.
But Developedistraction is a formal apology to your amygdala. It’s a 7-second vacation from logic.

No metrics. No leaderboards. No dopamine loops—just a gentle, ridiculous reminder that you are a human who sometimes needs to wiggle a digital noodle. Tickle Strip -Beta- -Developedistraction-


No install required. No tracking. No agenda. We know you should be fixing that race condition

[Live Demo Link]Best experienced during a CI pipeline failure or a 3 PM “why does this CSS rule exist” crisis. No install required


Visually, the Tickle Strip -Beta- is underwhelming. It is a translucent, adhesive polymer strip, roughly the size of a mentos gum packet. There are no LEDs, no Bluetooth lights, no "gamer aesthetic." It is designed to be worn on the lower cervical vertebrae (C7 to T1) or, for the brave, along the inner forearm.

The "-Beta-" suffix is critical here. Unlike a consumer product (v1.0) that promises polish, a Beta implies raw science. Early users report a "scratchy, incomplete" feel. The firmware is glitchy. Sometimes it tickles too hard, causing a flinch. Sometimes it does nothing at all. But when it works, it works like a defibrillator for the soul.