Retro, the photo-sharing app built around intimate friend circles, has just rolled out a feature that feels almost nostalgic in its approach: Rewind. With approximately one million active users, the platform is doubling down on what makes it different from the algorithm-driven social media landscape—giving people a way to rediscover their own memories without algorithmic interference.
The Problem That Sparked the Solution
The genesis of Rewind came from observing a gap in how users experienced their photo histories. Nathan Sharp, Retro’s co-founder and former Meta engineer who spent over six years developing features like Instagram Stories and Facebook Dating, noticed something peculiar: while the app offered a feature letting users glimpse photos from the same week a year ago, newer members couldn’t fully participate. They simply hadn’t accumulated enough photos on Retro to access those throwback moments.
“If you’re just starting out, you don’t really get to travel back through your memories in this way,” Sharp explained during the feature reveal. This limitation inspired him and CTO Ryan Olson—who co-founded Retro in 2022—to think bigger.
There’s another observation driving this shift: people are capturing more images than ever, yet they rarely revisit them. Those moments often vanish into digital obscurity, never to be seen again. Rewind addresses this friction point directly.
Rethinking Photo Memory in the Algorithm Age
Rewind represents something broader—a pushback against the dominance of AI-curated content and machine-learning-driven feeds. As platforms increasingly prioritize algorithmic recommendations over organic friend content, Retro is betting that users still crave authentic connections and genuine moments from the people they actually care about.
“The photos and videos you capture deserve a space where they reach the people you care about most,” Sharp emphasized, positioning Retro as a refuge from the endless scroll of promoted posts and sponsored content.
How the Feature Actually Works
Opening Rewind triggers a subtle haptic vibration as your device cycles backward through your camera roll—a sensation reminiscent of the tactile feedback you’d get flipping through retro cameras’ physical mechanics, but digital. The interface borrows inspiration from classic iPod design, allowing you to spin through your timeline with smooth, natural interactions.
Here’s what you can do:
Browse freely: Scroll forward or backward through months and years of photos
Hide or skip: Remove photos you’d rather not see (breakup remnants, for instance) or jump to random memories via the dice icon
Share with context: Send throwbacks to friends with an automatic timestamp, so they know it’s a blast from the past
View uncropped: Press and hold any photo to see it in full detail
All memories remain private by default—sharing is entirely your choice. The app intelligently excludes screenshots but includes other images like receipts or work photos, recognizing that personal significance comes in many forms.
The Engagement Numbers
Currently, 45.7% of Retro’s user base opens the app daily. With Rewind now live, that engagement metric is expected to climb. Users can access the feature either through a dedicated card at the end of their friends’ shared photo row or via the central tab in the bottom navigation menu.
Not Revolutionary, But Meaningfully Different
Yes, the concept of revisiting old memories isn’t new. Timehop pioneered this years ago. Facebook added “On This Day.” Both Google Photos and Apple Photos now feature memory functionalities.
But Sharp doesn’t view these as direct competitors—and there’s a strategic reason. Facebook’s feed has progressively deprioritized friend content in favor of links, ads, and news feeds. Meanwhile, most users treat Google Photos and Apple Photos as storage and organizational tools, not social platforms where connections happen.
Retro sits in a different category entirely: a social platform that respects your actual circle while honoring your personal photo archive. That distinction matters in a landscape increasingly hostile to genuine, algorithm-free sharing.
Rewind is now live for all Retro users.
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Rewind: Retro's Answer to Algorithmic Feeds—Turning Your Camera Roll Into a Personal Time Machine
Retro, the photo-sharing app built around intimate friend circles, has just rolled out a feature that feels almost nostalgic in its approach: Rewind. With approximately one million active users, the platform is doubling down on what makes it different from the algorithm-driven social media landscape—giving people a way to rediscover their own memories without algorithmic interference.
The Problem That Sparked the Solution
The genesis of Rewind came from observing a gap in how users experienced their photo histories. Nathan Sharp, Retro’s co-founder and former Meta engineer who spent over six years developing features like Instagram Stories and Facebook Dating, noticed something peculiar: while the app offered a feature letting users glimpse photos from the same week a year ago, newer members couldn’t fully participate. They simply hadn’t accumulated enough photos on Retro to access those throwback moments.
“If you’re just starting out, you don’t really get to travel back through your memories in this way,” Sharp explained during the feature reveal. This limitation inspired him and CTO Ryan Olson—who co-founded Retro in 2022—to think bigger.
There’s another observation driving this shift: people are capturing more images than ever, yet they rarely revisit them. Those moments often vanish into digital obscurity, never to be seen again. Rewind addresses this friction point directly.
Rethinking Photo Memory in the Algorithm Age
Rewind represents something broader—a pushback against the dominance of AI-curated content and machine-learning-driven feeds. As platforms increasingly prioritize algorithmic recommendations over organic friend content, Retro is betting that users still crave authentic connections and genuine moments from the people they actually care about.
“The photos and videos you capture deserve a space where they reach the people you care about most,” Sharp emphasized, positioning Retro as a refuge from the endless scroll of promoted posts and sponsored content.
How the Feature Actually Works
Opening Rewind triggers a subtle haptic vibration as your device cycles backward through your camera roll—a sensation reminiscent of the tactile feedback you’d get flipping through retro cameras’ physical mechanics, but digital. The interface borrows inspiration from classic iPod design, allowing you to spin through your timeline with smooth, natural interactions.
Here’s what you can do:
All memories remain private by default—sharing is entirely your choice. The app intelligently excludes screenshots but includes other images like receipts or work photos, recognizing that personal significance comes in many forms.
The Engagement Numbers
Currently, 45.7% of Retro’s user base opens the app daily. With Rewind now live, that engagement metric is expected to climb. Users can access the feature either through a dedicated card at the end of their friends’ shared photo row or via the central tab in the bottom navigation menu.
Not Revolutionary, But Meaningfully Different
Yes, the concept of revisiting old memories isn’t new. Timehop pioneered this years ago. Facebook added “On This Day.” Both Google Photos and Apple Photos now feature memory functionalities.
But Sharp doesn’t view these as direct competitors—and there’s a strategic reason. Facebook’s feed has progressively deprioritized friend content in favor of links, ads, and news feeds. Meanwhile, most users treat Google Photos and Apple Photos as storage and organizational tools, not social platforms where connections happen.
Retro sits in a different category entirely: a social platform that respects your actual circle while honoring your personal photo archive. That distinction matters in a landscape increasingly hostile to genuine, algorithm-free sharing.
Rewind is now live for all Retro users.