Slow-cial app Roost mimics carrier pigeon speed

▼ Summary
– Roost is a “slow-cial” app where messages are delivered at real-world bird speeds, taking hours or days to send.
– The app’s creator, Logan Mendelsohn, designed it as a break from instant notifications, aiming to reduce user pressure.
– Roost grew from 10,000 to 100,000 users in three days after a viral post about teens using it, and now nears 300,000 users.
– Privacy features include sharing only a user’s city by default, with optional precise location for close friends, and a “Pen Pals” feature with explicit warnings not to share personal details.
– Mendelsohn used AI-generated bird art, but after user complaints, he is running a contest for human artists to replace it, citing limited resources as a solo founder.
Somewhere above the Great Plains, a virtual woodpecker is winging its way toward Alaska, carrying a message to an anonymous pen pal. Meanwhile, a zebra finch named Tucker soars into Manhattan, delivering a friend’s doodle of the Cool S. These messages take hours or even days to arrive, depending on how far the bird must fly. That is precisely the point of Roost, the viral “slow-cial” app that is making carrier pigeons cool again.
Roost emerges at a moment when many people crave the chance to slow down and disconnect from apps that constantly demand their attention. It embraces technology that adds friction, offering a deliberate pause in an otherwise instant world.
“Everything on a phone is instantaneous these days , every single thing you do, it’s like you’re always getting some notification or something,” said Roost creator Logan Mendelsohn in an interview. “Roost is kind of a break from the instant. It’s resonating with people in a way where they don’t feel pressure all the time to have to do something.”
When you sign up for Roost, you choose four birds to add to your rookery. Each bird moves at the speed it travels in real life, so a falcon delivers a message much faster than a hummingbird. (Not every bird is a carrier pigeon, but including other species makes collecting birds and seeing your friends’ birds more interesting.) If you really want to slow things down, you can send snails or turtles instead.
Mendelsohn, a senior product manager in trust and safety at Ticketmaster, started building Roost as a fun side project to use with his friends. They loved the app so much that they encouraged him to publish it to the App Store. His friends were onto something. The app developed a very small niche following, but it started to grow exponentially when a mother posted on Threads about how her daughter was communicating with her friends in Elizabethan English on an app that sends messages at the speed of actual birds.
Within three days after that post, the app grew from 10,000 to 100,000 users. Now, about five weeks later, Roost is about to hit 300,000 users.
“The people are what really make this platform, and what people kept talking about is how wholesome it is, and how whimsical it is, and how much this really helps them put more intention into what they’re saying to people,” Mendelsohn said. “There’s a lot less pressure when you know that the message isn’t going to someone immediately that I think has really resonated with the user base.”
As a trust and safety professional by day, Mendelsohn knows that any social platform , even his innocent bird app , has the potential to be abused. So, by default, only a user’s city is shared with their friends. You can choose to manually enable a “close friends” feature to share your precise location with specific people.
“I personally think that for any new platform that connects people, trust and safety should be the first thing they think about,” Mendelsohn said. “When you’re able to start at zero with that lens, then you can build it into the platform instead of doing it later.”
Privacy concerns were also front of mind when Mendelsohn created the “Pen Pals” feature, which allows you to exchange messages with anonymous users in your age group. When onboarding onto the feature, you are explicitly warned not to give out your actual contact information or personal details. The app deliberately does not support photo sharing yet, as Mendelsohn wants to build out more sophisticated content moderation tools first.
Given the sheer size and scope of Roost , did we mention there are mini games? , it doesn’t come as a surprise that Mendelsohn has used Claude Code throughout its development. But the kind of people flocking to Roost tend to be those who are fatigued by the state of the tech industry, which drove them to seek out a “slow-cial media” app in the first place.
Soon, Mendelsohn started receiving an onslaught of complaints from people who were disappointed to learn that he used AI-generated art for the images of birds.
“On the AI art side, I completely understood the feedback. I won’t lie, it was daunting to see the reaction online, but I don’t think it’s productive to dig your heels in when your community is vocal about something they care for,” he said. “At the same time, I also knew I couldn’t flip a switch overnight. Replacing the art in an app this size takes time, planning, and money.”
Mendelsohn’s resources are limited as he continues to work on Roost in his spare time. He has no outside funding, and the app only generates revenue from in-app purchases like extra birds. To address users’ concerns about the use of AI, he’s now running a contest that will allow artists to contribute art instead. While that has satisfied complaints for now, the situation reflects a rising tension in the consumer app space. Many users now boycott AI art out of respect for artists, but the situation with Roost’s vibe-coded app shows the situation isn’t always cut-and-dried.
“As a solo founder, I don’t think I could build and maintain something at this scale without AI-assisted development, but every product decision and direction for Roost still comes from me and the community,” he said.
(Source: TechCrunch)




