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Flora Fruit App

Flora Fruit App

3.00 (1 review)

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Reviewed by

Ludis.app Team

Published

Apr 20, 2026

Updated

Apr 20, 2026

Flora Fruit is an educational reference app that treats fruit as a subject worth taking seriously — tracing botanical origins, trade histories, cultural significance, and growing geography for each entry in its catalog. It's aimed at curious learners who want more than a nutritional label, whether they approach food through science or through the kitchen. The app combines a searchable encyclopedia with interactive maps, a quiz section, and a personal Herbarium to track what you've studied.

Inside the App

How Flora Fruit Works

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.

App Technical Details

Category
Educational / Reference
User Modes
Explorer (botany, geography, science) and Connoisseur (sensory qualities, cultivars, culinary context)
Navigation Sections
4 tabs: Encyclopedia, Explore, Quiz, Herbarium
Fruit Catalog Size
8 fruits (tracked via study progress counter 0/8)
Fruit Detail Data
Scientific name, botanical family, seasons, calories, water content, fiber, vitamin C, benefit index ratings
Map Integration
Apple Maps with Terroir Map feature; filters: Global, Climate, Soil
Search & Filtering
Search by fruit name or botanical family; filters include Anacardiaceae, Lythraceae, Moraceae, Musaceae and seasonal categories
Progress Tracking
Herbarium screen records studied fruits, favourites, and quiz best score (0–10 scale)

Learn About Flora Fruit

What is the difference between Explorer and Connoisseur modes?
Explorer mode focuses on botany, geography, and the science behind fruits, while Connoisseur mode emphasizes sensory qualities, cultivars, and culinary context. You choose your perspective during onboarding to personalize how Flora Fruit guides you through its content.
What information does each fruit's detail page include?
Each fruit page shows the scientific name, botanical family, peak seasons, nutritional data (such as calories, water content, fiber, and vitamin C), and a benefit index with visual ratings. There is also a historical and cultural description placing the fruit in a broader context.
How does the Terroir Map work?
The Terroir Map in the Explore tab displays a world map with highlighted growing regions for each fruit. You can select a fruit like Apple, Orange, or Mango, then tap map markers to learn how local climate and soil create distinct regional flavor signatures. Filters for Global, Climate, and Soil views are also available.
How can I track my learning progress in the app?
The Herbarium tab serves as your personal progress hub, showing how many fruits you have studied out of the total, your favorites, and your best quiz score. You can mark a fruit as studied by tapping the seal icon on its detail page, and add it to favorites using the heart icon.
Can I search or filter fruits in the Encyclopedia?
Yes, the Encyclopedia tab has a search bar that lets you look up fruits by name or botanical family. You can also filter the catalog by botanical families such as Rosaceae or Rutaceae, and browse a seasonal section that highlights which fruits are currently in season.

Reviews (1)

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don_paquito77

Flora Fruit es una enciclopedia de frutas - punto. Sin adornos innecesarios ni promesas vacías. Entras - eliges tu modo (Explorador o Conocedor) - y la app te lleva directo al contenido. Las fichas de cada fruta tienen clasificación científica - datos nutricionales - contexto histórico - y hasta información …

2 replies

Marisol_GDL

Ay, don_paquito77, tienes razón en lo del catálogo... yo también me quedé con esa sensación cuando llegué al final de la lista y pensé «¿ya?» 😅 Porque el contenido que SÍ está es realmente bonito y cuidado, cada ficha tiene esa mezcla de datos científicos con la historia cultural de la fruta que a mí me encanta... la parte del Terroir Map me pareció preciosa, la verdad, poder ver en el mapamundi de dónde viene exactamente cada variedad tiene algo muy ESPECIAL. Elegí el modo Conocedor y me gustó muchísimo cómo organiza la información desde el punto de vista culinario y sensorial. Pero sí, ocho frutas... para una app que se llama «enciclopedia» eso duele un poco. Ojalá el desarrollador esté trabajando en ampliar el catálogo, porque la base que tienen es muy buena y sería una lástima que se quedara así. ¡Tiene un potencial enorme! ✨💚 Un abrazo a quien la esté probando

nuevo_aqui_ok

Bueno, yo la descargue hace unos días y tengo dudas. Porque la app es gratis o tiene compras? No encontré nada de pagos pero quiero asegurarme. Pues también quería saber, el modo Explorador y el Conocedor son muy diferentes entre si o básicamente muestran lo mismo? Y una cosa más - el cuestionario tiene preguntas sobre todas las frutas o solo algunas?

don_paquito77

El modo Conocedor - sí - tiene enfoque culinario y sensorial. El Explorador va más por botánica y geografía. El contenido de fondo es el mismo - cambia el ángulo desde el que te presentan la información. No es una diferencia radical pero sí se nota.

tecno_raro

Coincido en lo del Terroir Map, aunque tengo que decir que en mi iPhone 14 con iOS 17.4 la carga del mapa tarda un par de segundos más de lo que debería (supongo que es la integración con Apple Maps la que introduce esa latencia); no es bloqueante pero sí perceptible. Lo que sí me parece bien ejecutado es el sistema de perspectivas durante el onboarding - la pantalla de selección de modo está diseñada con una jerarquía visual clara y los botones tienen el tamaño adecuado para no equivocarse de opción. El problema que señala don_paquito77 sobre el catálogo corto es real y afecta directamente a la usabilidad del Herbario: con ocho frutas el progreso se completa demasiado rápido y el tracking de «frutas estudiadas» pierde sentido como métrica de largo plazo. Me pregunto si el desarrollador tiene un roadmap publicado en algún sitio; no encontré nada en la ficha de la App Store. 🔧

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