Reclaim is one of the better-designed tools for the "I intend to do things but meetings keep eating my time" problem. It finds gaps in your calendar and auto-schedules protected blocks for habits, tasks, and focus time.
Buffy is built for a different problem: "I have time, but I still don't follow through — and I lose the habit after a few weeks." That's a behavioral consistency problem, not a scheduling problem.
Understanding which one you're facing determines which tool you actually need.
What Reclaim does well
Reclaim's core value is smart scheduling. It connects to your calendar and:
- Finds open time for habits and recurring tasks
- Defends habit blocks against meeting creep
- Reschedules automatically when your calendar shifts
- Balances focus time, habits, and meetings across the week
This is genuinely useful if your calendar is chaotic and your habits keep getting pushed out by meetings. Reclaim is solving a real problem.
What Reclaim doesn't do:
- Send conversational nudges when a habit window opens
- Log whether you actually completed the habit (beyond "blocked time used")
- Track skip rates, snooze patterns, or adapt over time
- Work in Telegram or Slack as a behavior layer
- Handle behavioral memory across weeks
What Buffy does differently
Buffy's behavior layer works around time windows — not fixed calendar blocks. The difference:
- Reclaim says: "I've blocked 7:30–8:00 for your morning stretch."
- Buffy says: "Morning window's open. Stretch now, or shift it to 8:15?"
Both approaches reserve time. But Buffy adds the behavioral layer: a conversational nudge, a reply, a logged completion — and over time, a pattern.
What Buffy tracks that Reclaim doesn't:
- Completions vs skips — the event log, not just the scheduled block
- Snooze patterns — does the user always snooze the first nudge? By how much?
- Channel preferences — Telegram nudges get 80% reply rate; Slack gets 30%?
- Streak and slip context — when habits slip, what tends to be happening?
That behavioral data is what enables adaptation over months, not just weeks.
Side-by-side comparison
| Dimension | Reclaim | Buffy |
|---|---|---|
| Core job | Schedule and protect habit time blocks on calendar | Coach and track habits with contextual nudges |
| Calendar integration | Deep (reads + writes calendar events) | Behavioral windows, not calendar blocks |
| Habit tracking | Block completion (calendar-level) | Event log: done / skip / snooze / adapt |
| Reminder model | Calendar alerts + optional Slack nudges | Conversational nudges in Telegram / Slack / ChatGPT |
| Adaptation | Reschedules blocks around meetings | Adapts reminder tone and timing based on behavioral patterns |
| Channels | Web app + Google Calendar + Slack | ChatGPT, Telegram, Slack |
| Memory | Current schedule | Short-term + episodic + semantic event history |
| Best for | Protecting habit time in a busy calendar | Building behavioral follow-through over weeks and months |
The core difference in mental model
Reclaim treats habits like calendar events: protected, scheduled, reschedulable.
Buffy treats habits like behavioral commitments: windowed, logged, adapted based on real patterns.
If you miss a Reclaim habit block, it gets rescheduled. If you skip a Buffy habit, it gets logged as a skip — with context — and the system adjusts.
Both matter. But they're fixing different gaps.
Where Reclaim wins
- You have a full calendar and habits keep getting pushed out by meetings
- You want automatic time-blocking without manual calendar management
- Your team uses Reclaim for shared scheduling coordination
- Your primary failure mode is "not enough protected time"
Where Buffy wins
- You have time but still don't follow through consistently
- You want reminders in Telegram or Slack, not just calendar alerts
- Your habits need to work across morning, afternoon, and evening windows
- Your failure mode is behavioral drift over weeks, not calendar chaos
- You want to understand why habits slip, not just reschedule them
Using both
They can work together. Reclaim blocks the time on your calendar; Buffy handles the conversational nudge and behavioral logging within that window. Calendar protection and behavioral coaching aren't the same job.
A reasonable split: use Reclaim for work-hour tasks and focus blocks, use Buffy for personal habits, morning routines, and any behavior that needs to show up in Telegram rather than your calendar.
Where to go next
- Next step: start with one habit and a time window: How to Get Started With Buffy Agent in 5 Minutes