Your workspace, laid out the way you'd expect a file manager to lay it out. Folders on the left, files on the right, all the right-click menus in all the right places. If you've used Finder or Windows Explorer, you already know how to drive this.
Features
- Three workspace roots —
/projects,/assets, and/generations. Each one lives under your account and persists forever (or until you delete things). - Tree view + file grid. Tree for navigation, grid for browsing. Thumbnails for images, atlases, music, and any other typed bundle that has a preview.
- Create / rename / delete / move. All the basics, with keyboard shortcuts. Drag files between folders. Cut, copy, paste.
- Upload anything. Drag files in from your OS, or use the upload button. Big binaries stream to cloud storage; text files version themselves automatically.
- Inspector panel. Click a file to see its metadata — size, type, when you created it, who it's shared with, thumbnail, and any tool-specific preview data (atlas frames, audio waveform, etc.).
- Open with the right tool. Double-click a PNG and Pixel Artist or Image Edit opens. Double-click a tilemap, and the Tilemap Editor takes it. Right-click for the full "Open with…" menu.
- Drag files into other tools. Grab a sprite, drop it into Texture Atlas Creator or Extract Sprites. Drag an image into Background Removal. The Desktop routes it for you.
- Multiple windows. Open one File Explorer per folder if you're juggling several projects at once. They stay in sync — make a change in one, the others update.
- Visibility controls. Mark files
private,team, orpublic. Public files get a shareable URL. (Binaries clear moderation first — Skynet doesn't get to host whatever it wants.) - Realtime sync. When a tool saves a new file, every File Explorer window sees it appear immediately. No refresh button.
What you walk away with
- A clean, organized personal cloud workspace that every tool reads from.
- The ability to find anything you've made, anywhere on the Desktop, in seconds.
- A safe place to back up source files (with version history) and binaries (with moderation-gated public hosting).
It's the connective tissue of the whole Desktop. Most workflows pass through here at some point.