A Product Hunt launch actually worth paying attention to right now: Marqly 5.0 is out, and it's hitting a market that quite literally lost its dominant player less than a year ago.

Pocket is gone. Millions of users are looking for something new. And Marqly is trying to capture all of them at once.

What makes this interesting isn't that it's a bookmark manager — it's that they've taken a tool category that has barely evolved since 2015 and tried to make AI the actual backbone rather than a bolt-on feature. Semantic search is the big selling point: you don't remember the URL, you don't remember the title, but you remember reading something about sleep and concentration. You type that in. Marqly finds it.

You're not searching for what you saved — you're searching for what you remember.

It's a subtle but important shift. Raindrop.io, the closest competitor people actually use, still runs on keyword search. Readwise Reader has semantic search, but is primarily a reading tool for people who highlight everything they read — and costs twice as much as Marqly.

The feature that has really made people stop and comment is "Ask Your Library" — the ability to ask questions across everything you've saved and get answers based on your own content. It's not a unique concept (NotebookLM does something similar), but it's the first time a dedicated bookmark manager has tried to make it a core feature rather than a gimmick.

The bookmark app everyone forgot is back — and it can answer questions - Bilde 1

The Tab Saver extension is also worth mentioning: it collapses all open tabs into a single list and claims to cut memory usage by up to 95%. For those of us living with 47 open tabs in the hope of reading them someday, that sounds almost too good to be true.

Pricing sits at around $7 per month for Pro — more expensive than Raindrop and Instapaper, but cheaper than Readwise Reader. A free plan exists, though the details are unclear from the launch page.

What does this mean? The bookmark category has long been undervalued and underserved. With Pocket's demise and growing AI capabilities among niche players like Marqly, 2026 could be the year people actually start taking the "second brain" idea seriously again — but this time with tools that genuinely help you find what you saved.

Worth testing. Worth watching.

This is an early signal based on the Product Hunt launch and community response. We have not conducted a full independent review of all claims.