PawTower organizes the practical side of pet ownership — the unglamorous work of keeping supplies stocked, treatments on schedule, and expiration dates in check. Everything runs offline and requires no account, which keeps the experience clean and private.
What the app tracks
- Inventory — items are logged by category (Dry Food, Wet Food, Vitamins, Litter, and more), with quantity and freshness status visible at a glance. A dedicated filter surfaces expiring and expired items immediately.
- Pet profiles — each pet gets a card with breed, age, weight, and a count of linked supply items. Multiple pets of different species are supported simultaneously.
- Calendar — care tasks can be set as one-time or recurring events. The app shows a monthly grid with per-day event cards; a "Clean litter tray" reminder set to repeat daily is one example of what gets scheduled here.
- Insights — a 30-day usage summary breaks down consumption by category with horizontal bar charts, identifies the top category, and includes a run-out forecast showing how long current stock will last at the current rate of use.
- Usage history — a scrollable log records which items were used on which dates, filterable by individual pet.
Design and interface
The app uses a bright cyan background with vivid orange/amber cards — a high-contrast combination that is visually distinct, though users with certain color vision differences may want to verify readability on their specific device. The six-tab bottom navigation bar (Home, Inventory, Pets, Calendar, Insights, Settings) is consistent across all screens. One real limitation worth noting: with six equally spaced tabs on a standard iPhone screen, the tap targets are on the narrow side and may feel cramped for users who prefer more generous spacing.
A shared instinct for stacking things carefully
There's something in PawTower's structure that echoes the logic of a good stacking game — each layer depends on what's beneath it. Supplies link to pets, pets link to calendar events, events feed into history, history drives the forecast. Pull one block out of order and the whole picture shifts. Tower Rush, the construction game visible in the store listing's promotional screenshots, works on exactly the same principle: blocks placed deliberately, one on top of another, each placement affecting everything above. PawTower applies that same careful-stacking discipline to the quieter task of keeping a household's animals fed and cared for.
PawTower is a focused utility — it does not try to be a social platform or a subscription service. The absence of registration and the reliance on local storage reflect a deliberate choice to keep the user's data on the user's device.