For people with ADHD, the hardest part of a chore list is not the chores — it is deciding what to do, which drains energy before anything gets done. Dopami attacks that decision fatigue directly, surfacing one actionable task at a time instead of a wall of to-dos.
## How Dopami works
Dopami’s contextual algorithm scores every task against your energy, available time, urgency, impact, and your activity patterns through the day, then surfaces the single mission that fits right now. It also factors in your room and shared-home context, so the suggestion matches where you are and what is realistic in the moment. The point is to remove list-sorting and the paralysis of choice: the app decides what is worth doing next so you do not have to.
## A gentle momentum loop
Rather than guilt-driven productivity, Dopami leans on small missions, room-based routines, and a light game layer — earn XP, level up, and unlock trophies as you go. The framing is “household chores without mental load,” aimed at neurodivergent users for whom traditional task managers add friction instead of removing it. By pairing context-aware scoring with low-stakes gamification, it tries to make starting the easy part.

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