Every week, we look at apps that seem successful from the outside long before the numbers truly support that impression.
This article starts with Sapio, a general‑knowledge learning app built by 6 French founders who decided to put themselves on camera, not as creators, but as characters inside the story of building the product.
It’s 9 months old and already at 40K downloads.
The team runs five TikTok accounts, all managed by the founders.
Their main account, @sapio_culture, is essentially a devlog: the day‑to‑day of six friends trying to build an app together.
“Avec 6 potes, on vient de se lancer le défi de notre vie >> On est pas prêts” -> pulled 702.7K views.
“Me and 6 friends just started the challenge of our lives >> We are not ready”
Melchior Staszak, the company’s president, runs two accounts as if he were a creator for the app.
“I don’t mean to alarm anyone but five people from Harvard just finished writing down the entire known history of humanity to create a Duolingo‑style app…” ->1M views
But none of their videos really feel organic.
A month ago, we wrote about King of the Curve.
Another education app built around a founder‑led strategy, with a team that once again put themselves on camera to drive distribution.
But the result was the opposite: more than 30M views, huge virality, and still a surprisingly thin funnel.
Where Sapio struggles with consistency, King of the Curve struggles with conversion.
Two apps, different challenges.

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