3 Apps. 2 Months. 1 More on the Way.
We don't do roadmap theater at Shy Guy Studio. We ship.
In the last two months, three apps went from concept to the App Store. Not prototypes. Not betas. Not "coming soon" landing pages with email capture forms. Finished, functional tools that solve specific problems for people who manage infrastructure.
NetOps
NetOps handles network diagnostics. Ping, traceroute, port scan, DNS lookup, SSL check — the stuff you'd normally need a terminal for. It auto-registers hosts as you work, supports CSV and API import for your full inventory, and lets you export every output. Your entire diagnostic workflow, mobile.
Download NetOps on the App Store
Gantry
Gantry is a Docker container manager. Connect to any Docker host over HTTP or HTTPS, inspect containers, stream logs, run terminal commands, monitor CPU and memory. The kind of access that used to require SSH and a laptop now fits in your pocket.
Download Gantry on the App Store
Scrip x402
Scrip x402 is a different kind of build. It's a mission-based game that teaches the x402 payments protocol — the Coinbase and Cloudflare project that makes payments native to HTTP. You work through the protocol hands-on, upgrade your own agent, and earn real USDC. We built it because the x402 ecosystem is growing fast and the developer funnel is still narrow. More entry points help.
Download Scrip x402 on the App Store
Three apps. Three different problem spaces. Same philosophy across all of them.
No Ads. No Data Collection. No Subscriptions.
Every app from this studio runs on-device. Your phone talks directly to your infrastructure. Nothing routes through our servers because there are no servers. There is no backend. There are no accounts to create, no analytics dashboards tracking your behavior, no engagement metrics being optimized against your attention.
The pricing reflects that. One-time purchase. You buy it, you own it. No renewal reminders, no "your trial is expiring" popups, no features locked behind a monthly paywall.
This isn't a marketing stance. It's an architectural decision. These are tools, not services. They don't need a recurring revenue model because they don't have recurring infrastructure costs. Charging a subscription for software that runs entirely on your device is collecting rent on something you already own. We don't do that here.
Why Speed Matters
There's a temptation when you're a solo developer to wait. Wait for the perfect feature set. Wait for enough polish. Wait until you're sure the market is ready.
That temptation is a trap.
Shipping fast doesn't mean shipping sloppy. It means scoping tight, building what matters, and getting the tool into the hands of the people it was made for. The fastest feedback loop isn't a survey or a focus group — it's a real user with a real problem telling you what's missing.
Every week an app sits unreleased is a week of signal you're not collecting. We'd rather ship something sharp and focused today than something bloated and hypothetically perfect six months from now.
What's Next
App number four is in development. LEO — Low-Earth Orbit — is cloud compute management for iOS. Connect to AWS, Azure, and GCP. Inspect instances, stream logs, exec commands, and monitor CPU and memory across all three providers, without touching a CLI. The same philosophy as everything else we build: sharp tools, no noise, your phone as the control plane.
When LEO ships, the infrastructure apps will be available as a bundle. One purchase, full toolkit. Network diagnostics, container management, and cloud compute — all from your phone.
We're a one-person studio based in the USA. Indie. Bootstrapped. No investors, no board meetings, no product managers debating whether a button should be blue or green.
Just software that does its job and gets out of the way.
Quiet software. Loud craft._
— Shy Guy