Turn your daily routines into a game‑like quest with color‑coded habit boards, Pomodoro timers, streaks, squad challenges and AI‑tagged journaling—all in one sleek, customizable tracker.
If you love the rush of a good game, treat your daily routines like quests. I keep a list of tiny wins on my phone, and every time I tap “done” I feel a little surge of points. The app lets me set up check‑off habits for things like “drink a glass of water” and timer habits when I need a focused 25‑minute sprint on writing. The built‑in Pomodoro timer forces me to start and finish before the habit counts, which cuts the excuse‑making habit I used to have.
I grouped my habits into Health, Productivity, and Learning, each with its own hue. The visual cue alone nudges me to the right column when I open the dashboard. Adding a new habit is a single tap on the floating “+” button, then I type a name, pick a category, and, if I want, set a daily reminder. The reminder shows up as a push notification at the exact time I chose, so I never forget to log a workout or a meditation session.
Seeing a streak grow feels like leveling up, but life throws curveballs. When a day gets too hectic, I hit the freeze button—one of the limited uses that protects my streak without forcing a fake check‑off. On the rare days when I’m burnt out, the app’s Crisis Mode swaps the whole board for three micro‑activities: a quick breathing exercise, a vent‑style journal entry, and a tiny win like “make the bed”. No pressure, no guilt; just a way to keep the momentum alive.
Every evening I open the notebook icon and jot down a line or two about how the day felt. I choose an emoji that matches my mood, and the AI tags the entry with keywords like “focus” or “stress”. Later, I can search past journals with a single tap, and the app pulls up relevant memories from a month or a year ago. Those “On This Day” flashes remind me why the habit mattered in the first place.
I invited a few friends to a small squad. In the Social tab we see each member’s daily completion percentage, and a chat thread pops up whenever someone hits a new streak. The squad’s raid feature let us set a collective goal—read 10 chapters of a book in a week. The shared leaderboard added a competitive spark that made me actually finish the chapters, instead of just bookmarking them.
Beyond squads, the app lets you launch a personal challenge. I created a 30‑day “Morning Routine” challenge, added habits like “stretch 5 minutes” and “write a gratitude note”, then shared the link on a forum. Participants could join, and the leaderboard displayed who kept the highest completion rate each day. The visual chart in the Analytics tab broke down my consistency, showing peaks on weekdays and dips on weekends, which helped me tweak the routine.
The built‑in reading tab turned my e‑book backlog into a habit. I logged the books I’m tackling, marked progress by percentage, and noted the current chapter. The app nudged me with a reminder at night, so I’d finish a page before bed. Seeing the progress bar fill up felt like gaining XP in a game, and it kept me from abandoning books half‑way.
I swapped the default light theme for a dark mode with a teal accent when I’m in focus mode. The change isn’t just aesthetic; it signals to my brain that it’s time for a different kind of work. The Pro tier lets you pick any accent color, so you can match the vibe of a specific habit—green for health, orange for creativity.
The key isn’t to overload the dashboard with a dozen habits. I trimmed mine down to eight core actions, each with a clear visual cue. When a habit feels stale, I archive it—no data lost, just a cleaner view. The app’s habit templates gave me a ready‑made “Student Life” pack, which I customized with my own class schedule.
And that’s how I turned habit tracking into a game I actually want to play every day.
Procrastination is an emotional response, not a time-management problem; overcome it by breaking down intimidating projects into ridiculously small first steps and changing your environment to signal it's time to work.
This guide skips the generic advice and offers concrete tactics to overcome procrastination. It focuses on building momentum through immediate, laughably small actions rather than waiting for motivation that will never come.
To stop procrastinating on a presentation, separate the argument from the visuals by starting in a plain text editor, not the slide software. Then, trick yourself into starting by breaking the work down into tiny, specific tasks, like "find one photo" instead of "make the intro slide."
This guide explains why hiding your phone doesn't curb procrastination and offers practical strategies to break the habit, such as making your device less appealing with grayscale mode and adding friction by deleting apps.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store