Brick is great if...
You want the simplest possible switch: tap a small tag to lock your chosen apps, then tap again to unlock. It is minimal by design, with no points, levels, or extra screens to think about.
Both put a physical device between you and your phone, with a free app and no subscription. The difference is what happens next: Brick is a tap-to-lock switch, while Humanodoro turns focus into a ritual with visible progress.
You want the simplest possible switch: tap a small tag to lock your chosen apps, then tap again to unlock. It is minimal by design, with no points, levels, or extra screens to think about.
You want more than a lock. Humanodoro pairs a smart desk pad with two focus modes and a progress layer of streaks, levels, and XP, so focusing feels like building a habit, not just flipping a switch.
An honest look at how both tools compare across the things that matter.
Both use a physical device. What differs is the experience each one builds around it.
Brick is a tap-to-lock switch: tap to block, tap to unblock. Humanodoro turns focusing into a ritual you run on a desk pad, with sessions you complete and progress you can see.
Brick relies on the friction of getting up to tap the tag. Humanodoro adds friction too, but pairs it with streaks, levels, and XP so motivation builds over time.
Brick has a single blocked state. Humanodoro gives you a full Phone-Free ritual and a granular App Block mode, each with its own blocked-app list.
Brick is a small tag you mount and walk up to. Humanodoro is a desk pad your phone rests on, so the boundary lives right where you work.
With Brick, you tap the tag and your blocked apps lock until you tap again. With Humanodoro, you place your phone on the pad and start a focus session that adds XP and extends your streak when you finish.
Both create distance from your phone; Humanodoro adds visible progress that many students find keeps them going across a long study block.
Brick locks your distracting apps with a tap. Humanodoro gives your phone a home on your desk pad and runs a timed session, so the boundary is part of your workspace rather than a tag across the room.
Brick works in the moment, but it does not track how you are doing. Humanodoro records streaks and levels, so every session you finish builds toward progress you can actually see.
It depends on what you want. Brick is excellent if you want the simplest possible switch to lock your apps. Humanodoro is better if you want focus to feel like progress, with two modes, streaks, levels, and a desk pad your phone rests on.
Both are physical devices with a free app and no subscription. Brick is a tap-to-lock tag with one blocked state. Humanodoro is a smart desk pad with two focus modes and a progress layer of XP, levels, and streaks.
Both create real friction between you and your phone. Brick does it with a tap-to-unlock tag. Humanodoro does it with a desk pad ritual plus motivation to keep showing up, which helps if you want a lasting habit rather than a one-time block.
Yes. Humanodoro blocks the apps you choose, across two modes. The stricter mode can be exited early only with an intentional Pad tap, similar to how Brick asks you to return and tap to unlock.
Brick is built around in-the-moment friction. Humanodoro is built around habit-building: it tracks streaks and levels, so each completed session adds to progress you can see over time.
Yes. Humanodoro has a full Phone-Free ritual for deep work and study, plus a granular App Block mode, and the progress layer helps keep motivation high across long sessions.
Yes. Both are a one-time hardware purchase with a free app and no subscription. Humanodoro includes the focus app with streaks, levels, and two modes at no extra cost.
Humanodoro combines a smart desk pad with two focus modes and a progress layer of streaks and levels, so you can stop scrolling, start focusing, and build a habit that lasts.