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Yesterday's Top Launches: 1 Tools from January 22, 2026

Forvibe launched to automate the tedious process of submitting mobile apps to app stores.

Yesterday's Top Launches: 1 Tools from January 22, 2026

Yesterday turned out to be an interesting day for developer-focused releases, bringing us a tool aimed squarely at one of the more tedious parts of the job. Among the new developer tools that appeared, one stood out for tackling a universal pain point: getting an app from "code complete" to "live in stores" without losing your mind.

Forvibe

If you've ever shipped a mobile app, you know the drill. The coding part is one thing; the app store submission process is another beast entirely. It's a maze of different asset sizes, localization requirements, and repetitive form-filling for both Apple's App Store and Google Play. Forvibe, which launched yesterday, promises to streamline this entire post-development workflow.

The core idea is automation for the operational grind. Instead of manually creating dozens of screenshot variations for different devices and languages, or copying and pasting your app description into multiple store listing fields, Forvibe handles it. It automates localization, store listing generation, and screenshot creation. This means you could theoretically upload one set of master assets and descriptions, and the tool would generate the specific formats required by each platform.

Who would get the most out of this? It seems tailor-made for indie developers and small studios where the same person wearing multiple hats—developer, marketer, project manager—often gets bogged down by these administrative tasks. For larger teams with dedicated app store optimization (ASO) specialists, it could still be valuable for ensuring consistency and saving time on the initial setup for new apps or major updates.

A significant point in its favor is the pricing: it's free. For a tool that automates a clearly defined and often outsourced part of the process, a free tier is a compelling way to get developers in the door. The big question mark, which we can't answer without a hands-on test, is where the limitations might lie. Does "free" mean watermarks on screenshots? A cap on the number of apps or localizations? The lack of detailed pricing tiers or platform/tech specifications on launch day suggests the team is likely focusing on core functionality first and will iterate based on user feedback.

It’s a smart play to solve a problem that doesn't involve the glamorous side of coding but is absolutely critical to success. A beautifully coded app is useless if no one can find it or understand what it does because the store listing was rushed. By taking this friction out of the equation, Forvibe lets developers concentrate on what they do best.

While we don't have community voting rankings for this launch yet, the concept alone positions Forvibe as a tool to watch. Its success will likely hinge on the seamlessness of its automation and how well it handles the nuanced, ever-changing submission guidelines from Apple and Google.


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