Tiberium

A Notion alternative without database setup

You can find a Notion alternative without databases on most listicles, but the feature is usually crammed into an app that does fifty other things. Tiberium keeps the surface small so the feature you came for actually stays usable.

What to look for

  • No databases works on day one with no setup
  • No plugin store to manage
  • Same behavior on web, mobile, and tablet
  • Stays out of the editor until you need it
  • Free on the starting tier

Why no databases matters in a notes app

No databases is one of those features that sounds small until it is missing. When it is built in from day one, your whole workflow gets quieter — fewer extensions, fewer settings, fewer broken edge cases.

How Tiberium handles it

Tiberium ships no databases as part of the core editor, not as a plugin or a paid add-on. It behaves the same way on every device you sign in on — no separate setup per machine, no surprises.

  • No databases works in every note by default
  • Stays out of your way until you actually need it
  • No plugin store to manage or break on update
  • Same behavior on web, mobile, and tablet

Where Notion lands by comparison

Notion can be configured to handle no databases, but the configuration is the work. Tiberium picks the sensible default so you can stop tinkering and start writing.

Try a Notion alternative without databases that respects your time

Tiberium is free to start. Capture ideas, organize notes, and publish in seconds — the Notion alternative without databases most people actually stick with.

Sign up for Tiberium

Frequently asked questions

Is Tiberium really a Notion alternative without databases?

For the way most people actually use Notion — capturing notes, organizing them, finding them later, and sometimes sharing one publicly — yes. If you depend on Notion databases or full workspace wiki features, Tiberium will not replace those one-for-one.

Is no databases really built in?

Yes — it is part of the core editor on every device, not a plugin or paid add-on.

Is Tiberium free?

Yes. There is a free tier with the whole notes app, and a simple paid tier for extras like monetization on published pages.

Can I import my Notion content?

Tiberium accepts pasted text and Markdown. Most people copy across the pages they still reread and leave the rest archived in Notion.

Does Tiberium work offline?

Tiberium runs in the browser and saves to the cloud as you type. Short connection blips are fine; long offline sessions are not the primary target yet.

Where are my notes stored?

Your notes live in our managed cloud database, scoped to your account. Only you can see them unless you publish a note as a public page.