DarkMatter is a project and task platform designed around how people actually work when attention is inconsistent. It is not productivity theatre. It is a tool for getting from mental chaos to visible progress without punishing you for not fitting a conventional workflow.
Most systems assume steady focus, predictable estimation, and linear effort. That model works for some people and fails completely for others. DarkMatter starts from a different premise: momentum is uneven, cognitive load is real, and a good system should help you re-enter work quickly after disruption rather than making you feel behind.
The experience is built around clarity and recovery. You can park ideas before they vanish, shape them into concrete actions, and return later without losing context. That reduces the friction of restarting, which is where many people lose hours and confidence.
It also keeps structure without becoming rigid. You can break large, intimidating work into meaningful chunks while still preserving the original intent. The point is not to create perfect plans. The point is to make starting easier and finishing more likely.
Tools that claim to support neurodivergent workflows often just rebrand standard task boards. DarkMatter takes the problem seriously. It aims to be genuinely usable when energy, focus, and motivation shift throughout the week. That makes it not only more humane, but more effective in practice.