Picture this: you’re sitting at a coffee table somewhere, smack dab in the middle of an intense, whoever-blinks-first showdown of a game night.
Maybe you’re surrounded by a group of friends. Maybe you’re amongst family. Either way, they’re all opponents now. You open your phone, tap an app for a quick dice roll, and await your fate.
That kind of a no-fuss-no-muss quality is exactly why an app like Dice Roll SNS succeeds: people just want to roll, and move on.
As Sergey Senyuk puts it, the app resonates because it’s “simple, fast, reliable, easy to use during tabletop, board and dice games.”
It’s also become the signature trademark of indie developer Sergey Senyuk, namesake founder of the app business Senyuk, who after years of freelancing and contracting for other companies, decided in 2019 to start making apps of his own, each beholden to a singular design philosophy: make things that are useful, but make them clean.
That posture is a rather deceptively simple one when you think about it. It means that someone just like Sergey has to dedicate a significant amount of time and thought to what exactly gets left on the cutting room floor.
And when you look across all of Sergey’s other titles, they sort of fall neatly into line. Radio Explorer SNS offers straightforward listening. Sudoku SNS gives you clutter-free puzzles. And Candle Light Relaxation delivers clean, minimalist tranquility.
“My mission is to build simple, free-to-use, useful apps with a clean UI,” he says.
Even their names bear another one of Sergey’s trademarks, many of them stamped with his initials “SNS.” That, in a way, makes sense because, the way Sergey tells it, he was simply setting out to make something he himself would use, and that he personally would find useful. “That has been the driving force behind all my apps.”
But in building for himself, Senyuk has managed to also help people from all walks of life. Casual Android users looking for a quick tool. Tabletop gamers needing a dice app. Some want calming audio. Others are rather niche — gymnasts and coaches that use his Gymnastics Judging Symbols app, for instance.