Flora Fruit opens with a perspective choice that shapes how the app guides you. Pick Explorer and the focus lands on botany, geography, and the science behind each fruit. Pick Connoisseur and the lens shifts toward sensory qualities, cultivars, and culinary context. It's a small but meaningful decision — the kind of personalization that makes the content feel relevant rather than generic.
What Each Entry Contains
Individual fruit pages go well beyond a basic profile. The pomegranate entry, for example, lists its scientific name (Punica granatum), botanical family (Lythraceae), peak seasons (autumn and winter), a numerical rating, and a short historical note describing it as "among the oldest cultivated fruits in the world" with "exceptional symbolic weight across Mediterranean and Asian civilisations." Nutritional figures — calories, water content, fiber, vitamin C — sit alongside a benefit index with color-coded progress bars for vitamins and dietary fiber. Each card in the main encyclopedia also displays the fruit's botanical family, scientific name, seasonal badges, and V/F/A rating scores.
The Terroir Map
The Explore tab contains a Terroir Map — an interactive world map that shows growing regions for individual fruits, with tappable markers that describe how climate and soil shape regional flavor. Filters for Global, Climate, and Soil views let you narrow the geographic picture. Apple's growing regions, for instance, highlight areas like Normandy and Südtirol/Alto Adige. It's one of the more distinctive features in the app, though it's worth noting that map regions currently rely on visual color highlighting without accompanying text descriptions, which limits accessibility for some users.
Visual Style and Feel
The interface leans heavily into a whimsical, candy-bright aesthetic — rainbow-colored hills, a cheerful animated guide character with a slingshot, floating fruits, and deep violet gradients throughout. If you've spent time with colorful arcade-style mobile games where vivid objects arc and bounce across a sky-blue background, the visual language here will feel familiar. That same energy — glossy fruit, saturated palettes, game-like feedback — is channeled entirely into the educational side, with progress tracked in a personal Herbarium that logs studied fruits, favorites, and quiz best scores out of ten.
- Two user modes: Explorer (science and geography) and Connoisseur (culinary and sensory)
- Search by fruit name or botanical family
- Seasonal filtering and family-category filters (Anacardiaceae, Lythraceae, Moraceae, Musaceae, and more)
- Herbarium tracks studied count (out of 8), favorites, and best quiz score
- Four navigation tabs: Encyclopedia, Explore, Quiz, Herbarium
The color-coded progress bars and seasonal badges communicate a lot of information visually, but without accompanying text labels they may not serve all users equally well — a genuine limitation worth flagging.