Page Pace
How Page Pace works
There are four moving parts. They're all small. You only ever interact with one of them.
Quick answer
The short answer
You add a book and date. Page Pace computes a daily target. You log what you read. The target recalculates for tomorrow. That's the whole loop — and it runs whether you check in or not.
| Step | You do | Page Pace does |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Add | Book + finish date | Computes initial pages/day |
| 2. Read | Whatever you actually read | — |
| 3. Log | Tap today's pages | Updates progress |
| 4. Recalc | — | New target for tomorrow |
Why the loop is hidden
Most reading apps make you stare at the math. Streaks, percentages, days behind, weekly heatmaps. We hide all of it. You see one number for today and a progress bar for the book.
The math runs in the background because that's where it belongs. Reading is supposed to feel like reading, not data entry.
Run the loop on your next book.
Free to start. No credit card. Add a book in 30 seconds.
Frequently asked
- How does Page Pace work?
- Four steps: you add a book and finish-by date, we compute a daily pages target, you log what you read each session, and the target recalculates for tomorrow. The whole loop runs in the background — you only see today's number.
- Do I have to log every page?
- No. Most readers log once a day (or once a week) when they finish a session. The plan only needs an occasional update to stay accurate.
- What if I read at different speeds?
- Page Pace estimates from genre and tunes as you log sessions. After about a week, the time-per-page estimate is personalized to you.
- Does it work offline?
- Yes — Page Pace is a PWA. Once installed, daily targets and logging work without an internet connection. Changes sync when you reconnect.
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