
Our Take
Devon Kelley, Ilya Lisin, Jack Andrews, Elvis Bueno, Khaled Helmy, Milena Nikolic, Adam Fallon, and Sean King looked at ChatGPT's output and said "yeah, nobody's reading that wall of text." So they built Heywa—tappable visual stories instead of endless paragraphs. Think of it as turning AI responses into interactive, scannable experiences where users actually engage instead of just skim and forget.
The problem is real: ChatGPT and its clones dump walls of text on users and expect them to wade through it. Heywa flips that script by presenting information as visual, tappable narratives that people actually consume. It's a clever UX play on the AI content explosion—if everyone's generating infinite text, the real differentiator is how you present it. Whether this blows up or fades into Product Hunt obscurity depends on whether teams can build enough integrations to make visual stories the default way we consume AI output.
Based in the wild wild west of AI UX experimentation, and they're probably hiring for design and engineering talent.
The people behind Heywa
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