Nine more minutes should feel like a choice.
PPS is built around a simple idea: snoozing is easiest when it feels consequence-free. A paid snooze makes the tradeoff visible before you choose more sleep.
Do I have to pay to stop the alarm?
No. Wake-up challenges are the normal path through the alarm. Paid snooze is an optional way to buy more time instead of completing the challenge immediately.
Why show the next snooze price?
The interface is intentionally explicit. Before confirming a snooze, PPS can show the current price, the next price, and the free challenge alternative. The point is informed friction, not a hidden charge.
Why can snoozing affect a streak?
A wake streak represents completing the routine you committed to. When a snooze would break that streak, PPS is designed to show the consequence before the purchase.
Is this a punishment app?
No. PPS is closer to a commitment device: you define the alarm and its challenges while fully awake, then the app helps that earlier decision survive contact with your morning self.