A quiet workshop, not a factory
gDev | Studios is a personal studio where small programs get built slowly, shipped carefully, and kept sharp. Here's the short version of how it works.
Three things hold it together
One developer, one roadmap. Every program ships only once it's genuinely useful for at least one person — usually me. No sprints, no burn charts, no pressure to grow for the sake of growth.
Dark theme, quiet UI, hairline borders. No noisy animations, no dark patterns, no dopamine loops. Fast pages, honest data, honest trade-offs. If a feature doesn't earn its pixels, it doesn't ship.
What's being worked on, what broke, what got fixed — it all lands in Studio news. Bug reports and ideas come in through the support page and are read by a human (me).
Roadmap, roughly
No release dates promised. The studio opens doors when the rooms behind them are worth walking into.
- Day oneThe studio opens with one program
Stock Analyzer launches as the first live program. Everything else — Games, Tools — sits behind locked doors until it's ready.
- OngoingPrograms grow in public
New features, scoring tweaks and quality-of-life fixes roll out continuously. Breaking changes are announced in Studio news.
- NextMore side doors open
When a second program is solid enough to be worth your time, it opens. Not before. If it never gets good, it never opens.
Common questions
Who builds gDev | Studios?
A single developer — hence the name. I build the things I wish existed, then open them up to other people if they turn out well.
Why invite-only accounts?
Running market data and AI calls costs real money per request. Invite-only keeps the infra bill predictable while the studio is small. Ask for a code if you'd like one.
Is this a company?
No. gDev | Studios is a personal workshop, not a VC-backed startup. There's no team, no pitch deck, no growth targets. Just programs.
Is the Stock Analyzer financial advice?
No. It's an algorithmic scoring tool that summarises public data. Always do your own research before making investment decisions.
How do I suggest a feature or report a bug?
Sign in and open a ticket on the Support page. Every ticket is read. Good ideas become roadmap items.
Where does the data come from?
Stock Analyzer uses public-market data from third-party APIs plus internal scoring models. Sources and caveats are surfaced on each analysis page.
Take a look at the programs
One is live today, others are still behind the door. Have a peek at what's inside the studio.