ScreenFine

ScreenFine vs Brick

Brick is a $50 physical NFC tile you tap to unlock your chosen apps. ScreenFine is a $1/week iOS app that locks your target apps when you exceed your daily limit, requiring 25 verified pushups (or chosen redemption) to unlock. Both are hard commitment devices for users whose soft tools have failed. The difference is the cost type: Brick adds physical-tap friction (you must be near the tile), ScreenFine adds verified-effort friction (you must complete the exercise).

ScreenFine vs Brick

Feature ScreenFine Brick
Pricing model $1/week, no in-app feature unlocks (subscription only) $50 device + free app
Hardware required
NFC tile
Spatial dependency
Works wherever your phone is
Need tile to unlock
Hard-block consequence on overage
25 pushups / 15-min over
NFC tap required
Block strength
Pause anytime
Apps unusable without tap
Per-app granularity
Pro tier
Daily financial risk
Subscription only
Behavioural redemption
1-week window
Travel-friendly
Tile must be available
Public accountability
Wall of Shame
AI personalised consequence
Six villain personas
iOS only

Last fact-checked May 10, 2026. See Brick for yourself .

Where ScreenFine wins

  • No spatial dependency

    Brick requires the tile to be physically present to unlock. Travelling, working away from home, or losing the tile all break the system. ScreenFine works wherever your phone works.

  • Verified-effort cost

    Brick adds friction (tap to unlock). ScreenFine adds a verified-exercise cost (25 pushups, 1,000 steps, or 10 mindful minutes). Both work; the exercise cost compounds into a fitness benefit.

  • Behavioural redemption

    Brick has no recovery path. You either tap or you do not. ScreenFine's 1-week redemption window means a slip-up has a healthy-behaviour clearing path (steps, workout, mindful minutes).

  • Continuous tracking + reporting

    Brick blocks apps but does not give you data on actual phone use. ScreenFine surfaces daily totals, weekly cost trends, and per-app breakdowns.

Where Brick wins

  • Hardware tangibility

    A physical tile is more visceral than a software lock. For users who respond to physical objects in their environment, Brick's tile is more decisive than software-only enforcement.

  • One-time cost

    Brick is $50 once. ScreenFine is $1/week ongoing plus app locks. Total cost over 2+ years: Brick wins for users with bounded discipline budgets.

  • Hardware tangibility

    A physical tile sitting on your desk is a different reminder system than a software setting. The visible object reinforces the commitment.

  • No financial risk

    For users who genuinely cannot afford app locks, Brick is the safer hard commitment device. The cost is the device, not the failure.

Pick ScreenFine if

  • + You travel often and a stationary tile would not work
  • + You want a daily cap on the worst case (Brick has no financial floor)
  • + You want a behavioural redemption path for slip-ups
  • + You want public accountability via Wall of Shame or partner mode
  • + Your problem is total daily time, not specifically the tap-into-app reflex

Pick Brick if

  • + Your problem is specifically the reflexive app-open before any deliberate decision
  • + You want a one-time hardware cost rather than ongoing subscription + app locks
  • + You cannot afford app locks and need a fixed-cost option
  • + You like the physical-object reminder system
  • + You can keep the tile reliably available where you live and work

About ScreenFine vs Brick

Can I use Brick and ScreenFine together?

Yes. Brick blocks specific apps until tap; ScreenFine locks your chosen apps on total daily phone-time overages until you complete verified exercise. They are complementary. Brick interrupts the reflex, ScreenFine penalises the duration. Some users layer both.

Does Brick work without the tile?

Limited. Brick has a "remote unlock" feature for emergencies but requires a 5-minute waiting period. Travelling without the tile is workable but degrades the strength of the system.

Which is more effective for screen-time addiction?

Depends on the failure mode. If you reflexively open Instagram without thinking, Brick's lock-until-tap is stronger. If you keep going past your daily limit even when you know you should stop, ScreenFine's verified-exercise cost is stronger. Most users have both failure modes.

Is Brick a one-time purchase?

Yes. $50 device, no subscription. The companion app is free. ScreenFine is $1/week subscription plus app locks.

What happens if I lose the Brick tile?

Replacement is around $25. In the meantime you can use the remote unlock feature with the 5-minute waiting period or pause via the app.

Related reading

Ready to put real exercise on the line?

$1 per week via Apple IAP. 25 pushups per 15-minute overage block. No variable charges.