Jockr Full House treats nutrition logging as a discipline in itself — something that should be simple enough to do every day without friction. The core premise is that you define your own food products, assign them a standard portion size, categorize them, and then log meals against those entries whenever you eat. There are no preloaded databases to scroll through, no calorie calculations pushed on you, no noise.
Building Your Product Library
The Products screen is where everything starts. You tap the blue plus button, fill in a product name, enter a standard portion number, and select a category from four options: Proteins, Carbs, Fats, or Snacks. Once saved, the item appears in a clean list grouped by category. The interface uses white rounded cards on a light background, with black primary text and gray secondary details — a visual system that's easy to scan at a glance.
Logging, History, and Stats
The bottom navigation bar gives you four tabs: Products, Log Meal, History, and Stats. On the Log Meal screen, you select a product from a dropdown, set the date and time using a scroll-wheel picker, enter a portion amount as a decimal number, and optionally add a comment. Entries appear in the History tab organized by date, with each card showing the product name, portion count, and timestamp. The active state on each tab is indicated by color alone — blue for active, gray for inactive — which accessibility documentation flags as a potential issue for colorblind users who may benefit from additional visual indicators such as underlines or borders.
What the Visuals Tell You
The utility screens — Products, Log Meal, History — are deliberately spare. White modals, gray labels, blue action elements. There's a consistency to the interaction patterns that makes the app feel predictable once you've spent a few minutes inside it. The date/time picker is a standard iOS scroll wheel, which works smoothly in practice but is noted in the app's own documentation as potentially challenging for screen reader users.
The app's strength is its restraint. By refusing to automate or second-guess your nutrition choices, it functions more like a structured notebook than a prescriptive health platform — which will suit some users perfectly and frustrate others who want more guidance baked in.
A Note on the App's Broader Identity
The app's visual identity extends beyond its utility screens. Jockr Full House also carries a bold, theatrical aesthetic — deep purple backgrounds scattered with white sparkle effects, a central jester character in a white theatrical mask with a multi-colored hat ending in golden bells, and golden-framed slot reels lined with crystalline gems, red boots, and crown symbols. It's a high-contrast, glossy 3D visual world with dramatic lighting and swirling energy effects that feels miles away from the clean white of the meal log. That duality — carnival spectacle on one side, minimalist tracker on the other — gives the app an unusual character that's hard to place in a single category.
- Custom product creation with name, standard portion, and category
- Four food categories: Proteins, Carbs, Fats, Snacks
- Meal logging with date/time picker and decimal portion input
- Optional comment field on each meal entry
- History view organized chronologically by date
- Four-tab bottom navigation: Products, Log Meal, History, Stats