"When Angélique came to me with a bold vision, creating a safe music experience for kids, I transformed her idea into a working Android MVP that parents could actually use and test."
The Challenge
Building tech for children isn’t just about design — it’s about trust. Streamy Kids needed a platform that gave young users freedom to explore music while ensuring parents had total peace of mind. The founder, Angélique, wanted a solution that balanced fun, security, and parental control.
The challenge was to bring this vision to life as a lean, usable MVP. We needed a first version strong enough to pitch to investors and early adopters, but simple enough to build quickly and within budget.
My Contribution
As the Android developer, I took ownership of turning an idea into a tangible product. I designed and built the core mobile app, integrating with Spotify streaming services, while keeping the experience simple and child-friendly.
I also focused on the technical foundation — ensuring parental controls, offline-ready flows, and modular features that could grow with future updates. The goal was not just a demo, but a real, working product parents could try out immediately.
The Solution
The MVP included a streamlined music player tailored to kids, with an interface adapted to their age range. Parents could connect their existing streaming subscriptions, manage permissions, and ensure kids only had access to curated content.
This combination of playful design and robust controls showcased the product’s unique positioning: empowering children with music while maintaining parental oversight.
The Impact
Delivering the MVP was a turning point for Streamy Kids. It gave Angélique the ability to demonstrate her vision concretely to backers, parents, and partners. The app became a central piece of her crowdfunding campaign and marketing efforts.
Beyond fundraising, the project validated the concept: parents could finally see how a safe, connected player for kids might look and feel in real life — moving the idea from paper to prototype.