Crick Boom App
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Reviewed by
Ludis.app Team
Published
Apr 19, 2026
Updated
Apr 19, 2026
Crick Boom is a dual-purpose mobile application that pairs a cricket-themed game with a practical home appliance filter tracker. It's built for anyone who wants to stay on top of refrigerator filter maintenance without losing track of dates, costs, or replacement history. The app combines vibrant sports visuals with a clean, functional utility interface — two very different experiences living inside a single download.
App in Action
What's Inside
At its core, Crick Boom is a refrigerator filter management tool dressed in cricket colors. The utility side of the app lets you add appliances by model — the screenshots show a Samsung RF28R7551 as an example — attach a specific filter type such as the EveryDrop EDR5RXD1, and track every installation and replacement with dates, descriptions, and costs in USD. Wear calculation runs automatically based on either elapsed days or total liters filtered, so you're not doing mental math to figure out when a filter is due.
Tracking That Actually Shows Its Work
The Statistics screen gives a bird's-eye view of everything: how many refrigerators are tracked, total installations logged, total replacements completed, and cumulative spending on filters. Below those headline numbers sits a Status Overview panel that uses a color-coded three-tier system — green for active and fine, orange for due within 14 days, and red for replace immediately. Each status level carries an icon and a text label alongside the color, which helps when lighting conditions make color distinctions harder to read. The History tab holds a timestamped record of every logged replacement, including notes like "Routine replacement, 1 year" and the exact cost, making it genuinely useful for budgeting over time.
The Game Side of Things
Open the game section and the interface shifts entirely — a packed stadium fills the screen, floodlights create lens flare across the upper frame, and a batsman in a bright blue jersey numbered 24 stands mid-stance with a red leather ball caught in motion blur. The title screen layers a bold yellow-to-green gradient "CRICKET BOOM" logo over a dark background with aurora-style lighting and floating dollar bills scattered across the scene. A large green START button anchors the bottom. It's loud, energetic, and deliberately over-the-top — a visual language that has nothing in common with the calm white forms of the filter tracker, yet both live inside the same tab navigation bar.
Where It Falls Short
- The status system leans heavily on color coding. While icons and text labels accompany the colors, users with color vision deficiencies may still find the three-tier urgency display harder to parse at a glance.
- The app uses European date format (DD.MM.YYYY) throughout, with no visible option to switch — something to be aware of if that format feels unfamiliar.
The filter tracker and the cricket game feel like two separate products that agreed to share a home screen. That's not necessarily a flaw — both sides do their job cleanly — but users coming strictly for the maintenance tools may find the game section an unexpected neighbor.
Navigation throughout stays consistent: four tabs at the bottom — Filters, Statistics, History, and More — remain fixed across every screen in the utility section. Forms support manual text entry, clipboard pasting, and a Scan Text option for reading filter model numbers directly from packaging.
App Technical Details
| Navigation sections | 4 tabs: Filters, Statistics, History, More |
| Filter lifespan tracking | By days or by liters (segmented control) |
| Status alert levels | 3 levels: Active, Due soon, Replace now |
| Due soon threshold | 14 days or less before replacement |
| Date input format | DD.MM.YYYY with calendar picker |
| Cost tracking currency | USD with two decimal places |
| Data entry methods | Manual typing, paste, and text scan |
| Last updated | Mar 30, 2026 |
App Help Center
How does Crick Boom calculate when my filter needs to be replaced?
How do I log a new filter installation in the app?
Can I track how much money I spend on filter replacements?
What do the different filter status indicators mean?
What information can I store about each appliance I add to the app?
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