For all the talk about 2026 being the year of analog, most of the conversation has been about rediscovering old formats like vinyl, film photography, and journaling. What’s been missing from these hobbies is something genuinely new, a reason to believe paper can do more than it did before. Radioposter is betting it can.
The Midwest-based startup has built what it calls Paper-fi: physical books with synchronized audio soundtracks that follow readers in real time as they turn each page. No chips embedded in the paper, no QR codes to scan. The system uses patented computer vision and other modes through a smartphone or smart glasses to track your place in the book and play the corresponding audio. Whether music, ambient sound, or narration, the soundtrack moves with you at your own pace. The books themselves are designed more like art objects than traditional reading material, showcasing highly visual stories where audio and imagery carry the narrative together. Think coffee table book meets documentary or movie score.
Sound design, composition, illustration, photography, and storytelling all collapse into a single physical object. It’s not an audiobook. It’s not a picture book with a playlist. It’s a format that didn’t exist before, one in which image, sequence, and sound interact on paper in ways that screens have made us forget.
After years of infinite scroll and algorithmically generated content, people are looking for more tangible hobbies. The appetite for objects you can hold, experiences that have edges and endings, is real. Radioposter is positioning Paper-fi as a way to give the medium new superpowers, making analog competitive again without abandoning what makes internet storytelling compelling.
The company publishes its own titles and the app that makes it all work. Two books have launched already, with more in development. They are also actively looking for artists who want to pitch their work for the format and have programs to support publishing end-to-end.
Whether Paper-fi becomes a lasting medium or a beautiful experiment, it represents something rare: a new analog artifact built for this moment, not borrowed from the past.
Learn more at radioposter.com.
