You know exactly what I'm talking about. You click a link in someone's bio, and you're greeted by that familiar, soulless list of bright green buttons. Maybe there is a logo at the bottom asking you to sign up. It feels cheap. It feels temporary.

If you are a creative—a designer, a developer, an artist—why would you wrap your beautiful work in such a generic wrapper? It’s like serving a Michelin-star meal on a paper plate.

The "Liquid Glass" Difference

When we built rot, we didn't look at other link tools. We looked at high-end editorial design. We looked at brutalist architecture. We wanted something that felt like it had weight.

We use a design system we call "liquid glass." It’s dark, it has depth, and it uses subtle transparencies to make your content pop. It doesn't scream for attention; it just sits there, looking confident.

Reaction > Information

Most bio tools are just information dumps. "Here is my Twitter. Here is my YouTube." Boring.

rot is designed to provoke a reaction. When someone lands on your page, we want them to stop for a second and think, "Whoa, this person has taste." That split-second of admiration is worth more than a thousand clicks. It establishes authority before they even read your first link.

Own It For Life

And then there's the money thing. I'm tired of paying $12 a month for SaaS tools that do one simple thing. It’s death by a thousand cuts.

That's why we made rot a one-time payment. $9. Once. That’s it. You own your corner of the internet forever. No recurring billing, no "oops, your card expired" emails. Just pure ownership.

If you're ready to stop looking like everyone else, it's time to rot.

Ditch the generic list.

Start your 3-day free trial. See how good you can look.

Claim Your Name