Shooty Tuty App
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Reviewed by
Ludis.app Team
Published
May 28, 2026
Updated
May 28, 2026
Shooty Tuty is a mobile app that reframes reading as a structured knowledge investment system, treating each book as a financial-style asset in a personal portfolio. It's built for readers who want more than a log — they want to measure what they're actually gaining. The app lives on iOS and brings together dashboards, evaluations, and planning tools in one place. Whether you read for career growth, curiosity, or both, it gives that habit a framework with real feedback.
Inside the App
How It Works
Shooty Tuty approaches reading the way an investor approaches a portfolio. Each book you add becomes an asset: you log the title, author, page count, difficulty, and category — Business, Fiction, History, and others — and the app begins tracking your time spent with it as a form of capital investment. The idea is that reading isn't passive consumption; it's a decision about where to direct your attention, and that decision should be measurable.
What the dashboard shows you
The main Curator dashboard surfaces three headline numbers at a glance: average ROI, total hours logged, and asset count. Below those sits an Attention Capital chart — a line graph plotting your daily reading minutes over time, with dates on the x-axis and minute values up to 150 on the y. The Active Positions section lists the highest-priority titles currently in your portfolio, each showing its ROI figure alongside tags like Skills and a star rating out of 10.
Planning and simulation tools
The Plan section offers three tabs — Queue, Roadmap, and Simulate. The Simulate tab houses a Decision Simulator designed to estimate ROI before you commit time to a book. You dial in expected hours, a knowledge rating, an applicability score, and an enjoyment value, and the tool returns a projected ROI with a status indicator. A Queue Optimizer also helps rank reading order by difficulty and estimated value.
Evaluation and the four pillars
Once you're reading, the Evaluate screen asks you to score four pillars on a 1–10 scale: Knowledge ("How much new understanding did this provide?"), Applicability ("How usable is the material in your daily work?"), Enjoyment ("How engaging was the experience?"), and a fourth tracked through the same slider system. These scores feed back into the portfolio's ROI calculations.
The interface leans heavily on red cards against blue headers, and the dense layering of metrics, tabs, and sliders can feel like a lot to navigate at once — particularly for new users meeting terms like "Attention Capital" or "Avg ROI" without any in-app explanation.
A scoring instinct you might recognize
There's something familiar about the way Shooty Tuty handles scoring — the same instinct that drives a game like Chicken Shoot, where every target you hit pops a green or purple badge showing exactly what you earned (+12, +24, +48), and golden coins stack up at the bottom of the screen as visible proof of progress. Shooty Tuty channels that same feedback loop into reading: every session logged, every pillar scored, every ROI figure updated is the app telling you the shot landed.
App Technical Details
| Platform | iOS |
| Bottom Navigation Sections | 5 tabs: Home, Library, Analytics, Plan, Me |
| Plan Section Tabs | Queue, Roadmap, Simulate |
| Book Evaluation System | 4 pillars scored on a 1–10 scale (Knowledge, Applicability, Enjoyment, and one additional pillar) |
| Book Entry Fields | Title, Author, Pages, Difficulty (1–5 scale), Category tags (Business, Fiction, History) |
| Dashboard Metrics | Average ROI, total reading hours, asset count |
| Decision Simulator | Projects ROI before reading commitment via slider inputs: Hours, Knowledge, Applicability, Enjoyment |
| Attention Capital Chart | Line graph tracking daily reading minutes over a selectable date range |
Your Questions Answered
How does Shooty Tuty treat books as investments?
What can I track on the main dashboard?
How do I evaluate a book after reading it?
What is the Decision Simulator in the Plan section?
How do I add a new book to my portfolio?
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