Handcrafted and designed for algorithmfeedsurvivors
Take back control from the feed. Watch what you picked, not what the algorithm pushes next.
Join the waitlist for early access as new capabilities roll out.

By the QueueFy teamLast reviewed:
Quick answer
Algorithmic feeds often push engagement over what you meant to watch — including mindless scrolling and less control over what appears next. QueueFy does not fix platform algorithms, but it gives you an off-ramp: save worthwhile finds with the extension, close the feed, and start playback from a folder you curated. Discovery can stay spontaneous; consumption happens on your schedule, with a visible end to the session.
Key takeaways
- Algorithmic feeds often push engagement over what you meant to watch — including mindless scrolling and less control over what appears next. QueueFy does not fix platform algorithms, but it gives you an off-ramp: save worthwhile finds with the extension, close the feed, and start playback from a folder you curated. Discovery can stay spontaneous; consumption happens on your schedule, with a visible end to the session.
- Save gems when you spot them, then close the feed — capture the value without staying in the scroll loop.
- Pre-built queues remove "what should I watch?" decision fatigue when you sit down intentionally.
- Folder boundaries limit session scope — five items, not an infinite For You page.
How QueueFy helps this audience
Most people save more media than they finish in a week — which is why a system that turns discovery into a repeatable routine matters. These benefits focus on how QueueFy reduces capture friction and keeps your queue actionable.
- Save gems when you spot them, then close the feed — capture the value without staying in the scroll loop.
- Pre-built queues remove "what should I watch?" decision fatigue when you sit down intentionally.
- Folder boundaries limit session scope — five items, not an infinite For You page.
- Speed and autoplay for focused catch-up without re-entering the recommendation engine.
- Cross-platform capture so you are not trapped in one app's watch-later silo.
- Clean my mess to rescue videos trapped in tabs opened during a scroll session you already regret.
Use cases
Use cases below show how to bundle mixed media into predictable sessions so you finish what you save — whether that is a commute queue, a weekend catch-up, or a focused study block.
- No-scroll evening watch list: queue built at lunch, consumed after dinner without opening TikTok or YouTube home. (intentional)
- Curated queue instead of For You page: entertainment folder refilled weekly, not hourly by algorithm. (weekly)
- Weekend reset from saved picks: triage Inbox Saturday morning, autoplay the keepers. (replace scrolling)
- News without outrage spiral: save explainer videos from trusted creators, skip the comment-section bait. (ongoing)

Frequently asked questions
People naturally ask the same questions about switching tools, device support, and workflow fit. These FAQs answer the practical questions first, not marketing.
Do I have to quit social apps entirely?
No. Many people browse socially, save intentionally, and consume from QueueFy when ready — reducing passive feed time without going offline.
How is this different from Watch Later?
Platform watch-later lists are single-app and easy to ignore. QueueFy adds folders, cross-platform capture, cleanup tools, and queue playback designed for finishing.
Will QueueFy block or filter my feeds?
No. QueueFy is downstream of discovery — you choose what to save. Pair with platform controls or blockers if you need harder feed limits.
Can intentional queues feel like more work?
Intentional queues take a little upfront curation — QueueFy minimizes it with one-click save and default folders so building a queue stays lighter than doomscrolling.
Is this the same as a chronological feed?
Not exactly. Chronological feeds still optimize for recency and volume. QueueFy queues optimize for what you explicitly saved — a smaller, goal-aligned set.