Flyingpie is a niche Dutch software studio that concentrates on ultra-light utilities which inject retro-gaming convenience into everyday Windows workflows. Its catalogue is built around the idea of turning ordinary desktop programs into fluid, console-like tools: the single published title, windows-terminal-quake, reproduces the classic id Software drop-down terminal behaviour for any application, letting users summon or hide it with a single hot-key instead of hunting through taskbar buttons. Although the portfolio is deliberately small, the underlying philosophy—minimal CPU use, zero GUI bloat, and keyboard-driven efficiency—maps directly onto scenarios prized by developers, DevOps engineers, live streamers, and LAN-party nostalgics who want instant terminal access over games, IDEs, or chat clients without breaking immersion. Future utilities hinted at on the project page suggest the same ethic will be applied to other “always-on-top” overlays, quick-launch palettes, and borderless toggle frames. All Flyingpie software is offered as open-source, portable executables with MIT licensing, so technical audiences can audit, fork, or embed the code inside larger automation toolchains. The publisher’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always install the latest version, and support batch installation of multiple applications.
Turn any app into a Quake-style toggleable app.
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