The Wolf Was Not Bound.
You Are.
Every annual fee is Gleipnir — the impossible chain
In Norse mythology, Fenrir was the wolf prophesied to devour Odin at Ragnarok. The gods feared him, so they bound him with Gleipnir — a chain forged from impossible things: the breath of a fish, the beard of a woman, the roots of a mountain.
Credit card companies are your Gleipnir.
They bind you with things that seem impossible to track: annual fees that strike in silence, sign-up bonuses that expire forgotten, rewards that vanish unclaimed.
Fenrir Ledger breaks the chain.
Built by Odin himself to free you from the bonds of modern finance. The wolf remembers what you forget. The wolf watches what you miss.
Why the Wolf?
The Personal Mission
Odin, the Allfather of this codebase, watched too many warriors fall to forgotten fees. Too many friends missing bonuses. Too many kin paying for cards they don't use.
“I built Fenrir because I was tired of being Gleipnir's victim. Now the wolf hunts for us all.”
— Odin
This isn't corporate software. This is mythology made manifest. Every line of code is a fang. Every notification is a howl. Every saved dollar is plunder from the hoard.
The Norse Connection
We didn't choose Norse mythology for aesthetics. We chose it because it fits. The credit card industry deals in cycles — billing cycles, statement cycles, promo cycles. Norse mythology understands cycles: Ragnarok isn't the end, it's the turning of the wheel.
Every card you close breaks a link in Gleipnir. Every fee you dodge weakens the binding. Every bonus you claim is tribute taken back from those who would bind you.
“Though it looks like silk ribbon, no chain is stronger.”
— Prose Edda, on Gleipnir
The wolf waits. The chain weakens.
Every day you delay is another fee that might land, another bonus that might expire. Start tracking before the next deadline passes.