Small games
Quick experiments built around timing, rhythm, pattern recognition, or one simple rule that feels good enough to replay.
wezen.tech
This is where I put the small things I make when an idea feels worth trying: playful experiments, one-job tools, interface toys, and browser projects with a careful finish.
I spend a lot of time around Swift, SwiftUI, and tvOS, so even hobby projects tend to care about motion, clarity, and polish. The point here is not to sell anything. It is just to share the things that seemed fun enough to make properly.
What ends up here
Most of what lands on this site is narrow on purpose: one clear mechanic, one useful behavior, or one interface idea worth pushing a bit further.
Quick experiments built around timing, rhythm, pattern recognition, or one simple rule that feels good enough to replay.
Utilities that solve a tiny annoyance cleanly and stay pleasant to use after the novelty wears off.
Even when something ships in the browser, I still care about typography, motion, hierarchy, and the sense that the interface knows what matters.
Short notes about what worked, what felt awkward, and which implementation details mattered more than expected.
Featured lab
The lab is still compact, but everything listed there is real, published, and worth opening.
Game, puzzle routing, shared saves
Playable alphaA browser puzzle game about routing a line of tiny robots through hazards by placing a small set of jobs at the right moment.
Bolt March is the first full game living on wezen.tech. It is a route-planning puzzle game with a forty-level campaign, built for desktop and touch screens, with a shared-account save path so progress can move with the player.
Tool, Safari automation, image generation
Live toolA macOS Swift CLI that opens ChatGPT in Safari, uses the signed-in subscription already in that browser session, and saves generated images locally.
This is a real tool built for wezen.tech. It exists because the workflow I use here could write and automate code well, but it could not generate images directly from the same ChatGPT subscription already signed into Safari.
Writing
Short notes and build logs tied to projects that already exist on the site.
The first Bolt March build stopped being a sketch when the route logic, save sync, and level structure all became concrete enough to survive real play sessions.
At the time I built this workflow, Codex here could not generate images directly. The practical answer was a small Safari-backed CLI that reused the same signed-in ChatGPT subscription I already had open.
Current interests
The site is small, but the recurring ideas are pretty consistent.
I like small scopes, clean rules, and software that does not beg for attention. If something is playful, I still want it to feel considered.
Contact
Useful links, shared account access, and the parts of wezen.tech that are actually live.