If this sounds like your week
Every minute you search for a better workflow, the clock is still running somewhere you are not looking.
People looking for “Strict-mode friendly timer minimal distraction footprint” usually already tried notifications, web timers, and tray icons. The pattern repeats: the reminder fires, you dismiss it, and the countdown still is not in the place where the work is happening. On Windows, you need an overlay that is actually on top—without being another full-screen “focus mode” you resent.
Where tooling usually breaks
If the timer is not on-screen, you are not “staying on schedule.” You are hoping.
There is a reason “Strict-mode friendly timer minimal distraction footprint” leads to endless lists. Most tools are trying to be a platform. A HUD is the opposite: a small, high-signal object that is allowed to be boring, because its job is not engagement—it is a visible count-down that stays in your visual field. Everything else is a coping mechanism for bad placement.
What “always on top” is supposed to feel like
IDE: full screen (or near it) TimeFence: small HUD, stays on top, does not yank focus Time: still counting down, even when you are deep in a compile Tray: still irrelevant — that is the point