Developers in VSCode. Managers in Jira. Clients in email. Reality lost in context switches.
GitScrum was built by engineers who got tired of pretending this was sustainable.
Dark Mode Isn't a Theme, It's a Philosophy
Fifty-four IDE color schemes. Dracula, Nord, Tokyo Night, Catppuccin, Monokai Pro. Not because it's trendy, but because developers are viscerally attached to their environments. Switching from VSCode to a project management tool shouldn't feel like stepping into fluorescent-lit corporate purgatory.
We obsess over details most PM tools ignore because those details are the difference between flow state and friction.
Developers Aren't "Users"
They're professionals with refined taste, muscle memory, and zero tolerance for patronizing onboarding tours. They evaluate tools like they evaluate code—by what it does, not what it claims.
GitScrum speaks their language: projects are folders, sprints are contexts, tasks are units of work. Kanban boards that show one task at a time. Async discussions that replace status meetings. Blocker alerts that surface automatically after 24 hours of inactivity.
Agency Reality Check
Six client projects running simultaneously. Different timezones. Billable hours that need tracking without creating surveillance culture. Public proposals clients can view and accept with one click.
Dev workload heatmaps that show who's burning out and who has capacity—before someone quits.
Built by People Who Lived the Problem
Twenty years watching brilliant teams drown in tools that fought their workflow. Not a whiteboard brainstorm or VC pitch deck origin story. Just engineers who needed this to exist, so they built it.
Small team, remote, obsessive about craft. Every person could ship this product themselves. That's the bar.
What We Actually Believe
Quality over velocity theatre. Tools should adapt, not dictate. The product is the marketing. Word-of-mouth isn't a growth hack—it's what happens when you build something developers actually want to talk about.
No sales teams cold-calling CTOs. No desperate LinkedIn outreach. Just a tool so well-designed that engineers convince their teams to switch.


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