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Hi iOS gamers! I’ve just launched the TestFlight demo for Burst Shoot, a smooth and easy-to-play arcade shooter where WWII meets Sci-Fi madness. Command your aircraft and face monumental dieselpunk threats. xD
If you want to jump into the action and help me test it, grab your spot!
Any feedback on controls or difficulty is highly appreciated!
Thx for your support!
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Cali pages is an app where you can organize anything into a single view. Events, Tasks, Alarms, Links, Locations, and more can be placed wherever you want to, making it perfect from keeping track of a shopping list by yourself, making a home page for a group project, noting down a gym routine down, or planning a party with people just to name a few. The pages are sharable so that you can collaborate with friends, family, and others even if they don’t have the app with an App Clip.
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Placette is a cooking app in beta. It takes a recipe and runs it through a four-stage pipeline: it parses the ingredients, breaks each step into atomic actions, groups ingredients into named prep vessels, and then guides you through a distinct prep phase followed by a cook phase — the idea being that all the chopping, measuring, and grouping is done before the stove ever comes on.
What’s in this build to test:
• Recipe import and parsing (paste or import any recipe)
• Vessel grouping — the core feature, and the part I most want scrutinized
• The prep → cook phase hand-off
• Voice command-and-control during cooking (navigation + timers, on-device)
Suggested test cases:
• Paste a recipe with 15+ ingredients and see whether the vessel grouping matches how you’d actually set up your bowls.
• Try a recipe with ambiguous or compound ingredients (“1 onion, half diced half sliced”) and check whether parsing handles it.
• Run the full prep phase, then move into cook mode, and judge whether the transition is clear.
• Use voice commands mid-step with the screen at arm’s length.
Specific areas I’m seeking feedback on:
• Technical implementation: parsing edge cases or grouping logic that breaks.
• UX: whether the two-phase structure reduces or adds friction.
• Design: clarity of the vessel/prep screens at a glance.
• Device coverage: I’ve only verified on iPhone 16 Pro, so I’d especially value reports from smaller screens, non-Pro/older models, and devices without the Dynamic Island — layout and legibility in particular.
More about the app: https://cookwithplacette.app
It’s free during beta, takes about two minutes to try, and I’m happy to test anyone else’s build in return.
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KnowMine lets you build fully customizable dashboards using animated, native widgets. You choose what information to show, how it looks, and how it's arranged.
Available widgets include:
Sunrise & sunset, moon phase & illumination, planetary positions
Weather, world clocks, compass directional signals
Countdown timers, event counters, location info
Graph widgets (bar chart, area chart, pie chart, time series, radial gauge, KPI metric) — these pull data from any JSON endpoint you configure
The app is free with ads, or available as a subscription for full widget customization.
I'm looking for feedback on:
Which widgets you actually use day to day
The overall dashboard experience
Anything you'd like to see added
Thanks for testing!
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Added a running tab to the app, Need running testers to confirm if route creation is correct. If you enroll in a plan it should adapt to you in accordance to missing it due to injury or sickness, and should adapt to ease you back into the plan as needed.
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S2G keeps your crew together on shared trips — live map, push-to-talk voice and group chat in one SwiftUI app. Built for festival convoys, multi-car road trips, theme-park groups and ski tours.
Testing focus:
Push-to-talk latency / audio clarity in motion
Live-map sync between 2+ devices
Onboarding & invite-link UX
Background-location accuracy + battery impact
iPad layout, CarPlay (if approved)
Looking for: 2+ person crews who can test together. PTT and map sync only shine with multiple devices, but solo testers are welcome for onboarding/UX feedback.
Stack: SwiftUI · iOS 17+ · Firebase Auth/Firestore · LiveKit (PTT) · MapKit · CoreLocation
Privacy: location only during active trips; voice end-to-end encrypted and not stored; contacts never uploaded.
Feedback: please use TestFlight screenshot feedback inside the app.
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Hi everyone,
I've been building Syndic, a clean RSS reader for Apple platforms, and I'd love some feedback before the App Store launch.
It works on Mac, iPad and iPhone — same app, same feeds, synced via iCloud.
Main features:
Add any RSS, Atom or JSON Feed
Folders to organise your feeds
Favorites and Read Later
Mix Flavors — a dice that picks a random article for you
Discover Feeds — 35 curated feeds to get started
Import and Export OPML
Any feedback on navigation, performance or anything that feels off is very welcome.
Thanks for your time
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Hi! I’m looking for a few people to test an iPhone app I’ve been building called Mossly.
It’s for houseplant care. You can add your plants, try identifying one from a photo, get care notes, and check what might be wrong if a plant looks sad.
I’m mostly looking for people who actually have plants at home and are willing to be honest. I need to know what feels confusing, buggy, wrong, slow, or not useful.
TestFlight link:
https://testflight.apple.com/join/3zyEm1vb
A few things that would help me a lot:
add at least one real plant
try plant ID with a photo
check if the care advice feels right
try the health check if one of your plants has an issue
tell me if the subscription screen feels clear or annoying
If you find something weird, the best way to send feedback is to take a screenshot in the app, tap Share, then choose “Share Beta Feedback.”
The beta is free through TestFlight. There is a subscription screen in the app, but TestFlight purchases should be sandboxed. I can also give a few helpful testers a free premium code after launch as a thank you.
Thanks if you try it. Blunt feedback is very welcome.
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Help us polish KIMYA by testing:
Onboarding & permissions flows
Zone creation & smart suggestions
Shortcuts / App Intents
NFC tag workflows
Profile & subscription states
Import / export features
Localization & UI clarity
What to report:
Confusing screens or navigation
Wrong context suggestions
Crashes or freezes
Permission issues
Recommendations that feel off
Your feedback makes KIMYA smarter and smoother. Dive in and let us know what feels right—and what doesn’t!
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md.too is a minimalist, read-only Markdown viewer for macOS and iOS. It is native (Swift + AppKit / UIKit / SwiftUI), has zero third-party dependencies, and no accounts, analytics, or telemetry.
What it does:
Opens a .md file and renders it.
Selectable, copyable text. Code blocks and tables get a one-click copy button.
Quick Look extension on macOS — spacebar peek and Finder preview pane render .md.
Syntax highlighting for about 40 languages.
GitHub-style task lists, tables, inline images, and a tiny LaTeX subset.
Exports the rendered document to a paginated PDF with images embedded (macOS).
Light and dark theme — follows the system, or pick one explicitly.
What it doesn't do:
No editor, no live preview, no autosave. Read-only by design.
No HTML rendering, no WKWebView.
No third-party packages.
More info and source: https://leok7v.github.io/md.too/
Looking for feedback on rendering correctness across a variety of real-world Markdown files (READMEs, AGENTS.md, PLAN.md, issues, PRs, wikis), as well as Quick Look behavior on macOS and any edge cases with nested lists, blockquotes, code fences, tables, and the LaTeX subset.
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Hi, I have created an app for developers that helps to build app faster, it is a library of components, so it is a community, the goal is to publish components and use components from the library for free (there is an option to make a component not free and earn money from what you publish) but the main goal at the moment is to have a huge library. Thanks for reading this.
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Track TV shows, remember where you left off, and see upcoming episodes at a glance. EpisodePal keeps your watchlist clean, current, and easy to jump back into.
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Hi everyone,
I’ve been working on a personal project to help streamline my own home organization, and I wanted to see if others in this community face similar challenges.
Like many of you, I’ve struggled with keeping a clear mental map of everything in my living space—specifically when it comes to knowing what I have on hand and, more importantly, when things are about to expire. I found that I was either overbuying or letting things go to waste because they were tucked away in a cabinet or pantry.
To solve this for myself, I’ve been developing a digital tool called Modus. I'm trying to move away from the "clutter" of traditional spreadsheets or complex apps and instead focus on a clean, fast way to track home inventory.
What I’m trying to solve:
Inventory Clarity: A quick way to log home essentials so you actually know what’s in your cupboards.
Waste Reduction: Simple notifications for expiry dates so items get used instead of tossed.
Low Friction: An interface that feels like a natural extension of tidying up rather than another chore.
I’m currently in the testing phase and would love to hear from this group: Is a digital companion something you would actually find useful for your home organization routine?
If you’re interested in trying it out and sharing your thoughts on how it fits into your workflow, I’d love to get your feedback. I’m actively refining the build based on how people actually organize their spaces, so your insights would be incredibly helpful!
Thanks for any thoughts or advice you can share!
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Crash Buddy is designed for developers and QA testers who need a fast and efficient way to understand why an app crashed.
Import .ips crash log files generated by iOS and instantly get a structured, easy-to-read report with all the information needed for debugging and troubleshooting.
Key Features:
Import and analyze .ips crash logs
Automatic crash summary with possible root cause insights
Full stack trace visualization
Frame and binary image analysis
Technical details about the app environment and build
Fast navigation through crash details
Crash Buddy also includes Crash Intelligence, an on-device AI assistant that lets you chat directly with your crash logs.
Ask questions like:
“What is the most likely cause of this crash?”
“Which frame looks suspicious?”
“What does this exception mean?”
“How can I reproduce this issue?”
All analysis happens directly on the device, helping keep sensitive crash data private without sending information to external servers.
Crash Buddy helps reduce debugging time, understand complex stack traces, and speed up issue resolution.
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Thanks to everyone who tested my app.
New in version 1.6.86:
Fixed incorrect calculation in Imperial. Thanks to M...i!
Favourites and Daily
Categorisation of meals into daily, morning, lunch...
GUI tweaks
Backup function
Improved AI analysis
Performance bug fixes
Minor bug fixes
-------------Description-------------
Say goodbye to tedious calorie counting and manual ingredient tracking!
Discover Your Meal – the revolutionary way to understand and manage your nutrition.
Our app turns your smartphone camera into a smart nutrition coach. Simply snap a photo of your meal, and our advanced AI – powered by Google Gemini – instantly provides a detailed nutritional analysis.
Whether your goal is weight loss, maintenance, or muscle gain – Your Meal is your perfect companion for mindful and healthy eating.
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Luma — Live. Understand. Move. Act.
Luma is a personal life operating system designed to help you organise your days, focus on what matters, and make steady progress across your life.
More than a simple task manager, Luma brings your goals, projects, plans, habits, routines, fitness, finances, notes, and reflections into one calm and structured space. It helps you understand where your attention is going, what needs action, and how your daily choices connect to the bigger picture.
Whether you are planning your week, tracking personal progress, reviewing your routines, or simply trying to feel more in control, Luma gives you a clean and thoughtful way to manage life without the noise.
What you can do with Luma
Organise your life around clear areas, goals, projects, and actions.
Plan your days and weeks with a calmer, more intentional approach.
Track routines, habits, fitness, nutrition, and personal progress.
Capture notes, ideas, and reflections in one place.
Review your week and decide what matters next.
Use simple dashboards to understand your direction and momentum.
Luma is built for people who want more clarity, better focus, and a system that supports real life — not just another to-do list.
Live with intention. Understand your patterns. Move with purpose. Act on what matters.
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Hi,
I released Splacer to the TestFlight Store.
Splacer manages To-Dos, Appointments, Files, Notes, Lists, and Contacts in Spaces and Projects, so everything can be found in one place and organized however you like.
To-Dos and Appointments can be synced with your iOS Calendar (either to your projects, your calendar, both, or neither).
Having severe ADHD, I needed an app that handles all of this without forcing me to open 2–3 different apps just to prepare for, for example, a meeting at work.
You can share Spaces and Projects with other people to send or receive information. My SO can now add things directly to my shared Space, so I don’t have an excuse anymore for forgetting stuff… and I will forget it. It keeps me disciplined!
Hope some of you can relate to Splacer and find it helpful for organizing your stuff.
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It's a simple, but beautiful goal and savings tracker. Create goals, organize them in folders, and celebrate all the little milestones.
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Hey All,
I'm looking for a few users to help test my app on testflight. It's a pretty straight forward ad free app built to help educate users on the benefits of health products and it includes a shop section where you can purchase relevant products from top brands. Thanks in advance, appreciate your help!
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Hi everyone, I’m looking for a few people to help test Kanso Reader on TestFlight.
This is a personal app I built around how I save and read articles every day. It is really just a personal app (at least for now), but I thought maybe some of you are keen to help test it and give feedback.
The workflow is pretty simple:
save interesting articles
clean up the page for reading
export to PDF, Markdown, EPUB
A few things about it:
local-first
no cloud sync (yet)
no subscription
backups are basically through exports
So this is not meant to be a huge feature-heavy product. It is more like a focused, practical app built around my own everyday use.
Current features:
save article links
cleaned, distraction-free reading view
dark/light mode
reading preferences
tags and search
notes
export to PDF / EPUB / Markdown
I’d especially love feedback on:
article cleanup quality
sites that fail to parse properly
reading experience
export quality
bugs and performance