Snooze-proof, game on

Lazy Alarm

AREA OF TIME

Simon Says… Get Up

Every morning, I hit snooze before I’m even conscious. My brain seems to silence alarms before I’m even awake – and I keep waking up groggy, late, and annoyed. So I built something my half-asleep self couldn’t outsmart: a Simon Says alarm clock that forces you to wake up and pay attention – or it just keeps getting louder.
This isn’t just an alarm. It’s a mental obstacle course designed to wake up your brain.

HOW IT WORKS

Levels range from 1 to 4 – just enough chaos to clear your sleep fog.

  • 7:00 AM: A loud, continuous tone plays.
  • Press any button to start the game.
  • A light sequence begins (Level 1). Repeat it correctly using four buttons with matching LEDs.
  • If you get it wrong → the game resets and drops a level.
  • Wait too long (12 seconds)? The alarm resumes – louder, and now at a higher level.
  • The longer you delay, the harder it gets.
  • Beat any level = the alarm stops. Only then can you go back to sleep.

BUILD PROCESS
01.

Game Logic + Sound

I started by building the Simon Says memory game using an Arduino, four buttons, four LEDs, and a speaker. Once the sequence and responses worked as planned, I integrated the alarm behavior.

02.

Soldering

To make the setup portable and desk-friendly, I transferred the working circuit from a breadboard to solderable boards, making it stable enough to live in an enclosure.

03.

Enclosure

I built a simple, custom enclosure to hold the components in place – functional, compact, and loud enough to do the job.

FINAL OUTPUT

Watch the alarm that refuses to be ignored. (annoying noise incoming)

CONCLUSION & FUTURE SCOPE

This project was chaotic, intense, and one of the most entertaining things I’ve ever built. It combined sound, logic, and interaction in a way that was both practical and ridiculous – and that’s exactly what I wanted. Building something that could fight back against my snoozing habit was deeply satisfying, and it taught me a lot about user experience in physical devices – especially under pressure (and sleepiness). In the future, I’d love to add a visual countdown to make inactivity more obvious, display the actual time, integrate vibration feedback for silent alarms, and improve the enclosure for a cleaner build. But even in its current form, this little alarm clock gets the job done – and makes sure I do too.

CREDITS

Clock Ticking Sound Effect by u_mx4xkr2bzy from Pixabay
Soldering stock image Designed by Freepik

LIKED THIS ONE?

Explore More Work

Thanks for checking out this project! If you’re curious to see what else I’ve been working on – from motion design experiments to playful tech builds – feel free to take a look at some of my other projects below.