Tantrums, endless scrolling, short attention spans — every parent knows the struggle. What if screen time could actually make kids smarter, more expressive, and emotionally stronger?

For most parents, screens are both a gift and a curse. A few minutes of peace. A quiet dinner. A chance to get something done. But slowly, those quiet moments turn into hours of noise, tantrums, and glazed eyes.
It always starts small. A quick video. A puzzle game. A cartoon that looks harmless. But every tap is designed to keep kids hooked. YouTube keeps rolling the next video. Games throw out rewards every few seconds. The colors, the sounds, the “just one more level” loop — it’s not play anymore, it’s programming. And when you finally try to take the tablet away, the reaction says it all.
When a screen fills every quiet space, imagination disappears. Boredom, the soil where creativity grows, gets paved over. Stories stop happening in a child’s mind. They become something to watch, not to live inside.
Even story apps, once promising something better, fall into the same pattern. They sell pre-recorded voices, pre-written tales, and a new story only if you pay again. Nothing bends or changes with the child’s curiosity. It’s fast food for the imagination.
That’s why we built Pooki. To bring stories back to life. In Pooki, every story unfolds through conversation — your child’s voice guiding where it goes. No ads. No next episode button. No “one more level.” Just a calm space where curiosity builds the adventure.
Screens aren’t evil. They’re just loud. But kids deserve something quieter, something that listens back. We can build tech that teaches, inspires, and stays gentle.
Because childhood shouldn’t be an algorithm.
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