There s a point in every developer s life when they build their own finance app. It s a rite of passage. Mine has arrived. I built Cashzilla for three reasons: I wanted it to be genuinely free — not free-until-the-useful-parts. It s local-only: no accounts, no server, no cloud, no bank sync. Your data lives on your device and never touches mine. That s also why it s free — there s nothing running that costs me money, so there s nothing to monetize by locking features away. If that ever changes, I ll be upfront about it. I don t want a budget. I ve never stuck to one and I don t want an app that makes me feel bad about that. My vision was to build a coach: something that tells me what my money is actually doing and whether it s working for me. Opening a finance app should feel give you some pleasure; if it feels like a chore, I just won t open it. It s early, but usable: manual entry (or CSV import), accounts, scheduled/upcoming transactions, and a set of charts. I m dogfooding it daily and releasing features every week. Right now I m building stock/position tracking so net worth reflects everything, not just cash.For the React Native folks: understanding expo-router and dealing with the charts pwas disproportionately painful I burned more time than I d like to admit bouncing between libraries before landing on a Skia setup (react-native-skia + Victory Native).I d love feedback. You ve almost certainly tried a pile of these — I m curious what actually made you stick with one, and where you can spot friction or obvious gotchas in mine.Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pluckd.cas...(Play Store screenshots are a bit outdated, sorry.)