Public projects
Open selected parts of a project publicly without giving people access to the full workspace.
Some projects benefit from being more open. Indie games, small software products, open development projects, and community-driven tools often need feedback long before everything is finished.
Grunnaro lets you share selected parts of a project publicly, while keeping the rest of the workspace private. You can show progress, collect feedback, and make your direction visible without inviting people into your internal planning space.
Show progress without exposing everything
A public project does not have to mean a fully open workspace. You may want people to follow ideas, see selected todos, or understand what is being worked on next, while still keeping private discussions, internal notes, and sensitive planning hidden.
This makes public projects useful for developers who want to build in public, but still need a calm and controlled place to work.
Useful for indie developers and game projects
If you are building an indie game or a small product, public visibility can help people understand where the project is going. Instead of only posting occasional updates, you can let others follow the parts of the project you choose to share.
That can make it easier to gather feedback, explain priorities, and show that the project is active without turning your whole workflow into a public performance.
Public feedback, private execution
Grunnaro separates openness from access. People can see what you choose to make public, but that does not mean they can see or change everything inside the project.
You stay in control of what is shared, what remains private, and when an idea becomes committed work.
In short
Public projects let you share progress and invite feedback without opening your full workspace.