Every year, over 27 million startups fail worldwide. When they do, what they built doesn't disappear — the code, the users, the domains, the design. It just becomes invisible. Archived in private repositories. Forgotten on servers about to be shut down. Domains expiring in silence.
Work that deserved better, left in digital limbo.
Building is one thing. Selling is something else entirely. Some are brilliant developers but terrible at sales. Others hit the wrong market, wrong timing, wrong country. Many simply ran out of energy.
And when that happens? There's no natural exit. Nowhere to go. So they just... let it die.
It feels like failure. But it isn't.
What was wrong for you can be perfect for someone else. Reliq was built on that one simple observation.
An app that failed in Norway might be exactly what Brazil needs. A domain you never used could be someone else's dream name. The design system you built on evenings is worth something — to the right buyer. The user base you couldn't grow could be gold for an operator who knows how.
We're not building a graveyard. We're building a place where digital projects find new owners, new markets, new life.
- →That selling an unfinished project is mature, not weak
- →That the value of work doesn't disappear even when the company does
- →That the right owner can be anyone, anywhere
- →That nothing should die in silence when someone else could use it