Tower Forges App
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Reviewed by
Ludis.app Team
Published
May 28, 2026
Updated
May 28, 2026
Tower Forges is a workout tracking app designed for lifters who prefer a no-nonsense environment for logging their training. The interface runs in deep emerald and anthracite tones, keeping the experience focused and distraction-free. Inside, you'll find exercise logging, personal records, statistics, and a built-in tips section covering training fundamentals. It suits anyone who wants their gym data organized and accessible in one quiet, structured place.
App in Action
Inside the App
Tower Forges approaches strength training as a discipline of precision rather than motivation. Each session is broken down into sets logged with weight in kilograms, reps, number of sets, an optional RPE score from 1 to 10, a date, and a free-text comment field for notes on technique or feel. The dark-themed interface — white text on near-black backgrounds with teal accents — keeps the data readable and the hierarchy clear.
What the three tabs give you
- Exercises — your exercise library with per-exercise history, showing your top working set and a full log of past entries with dates.
- Stats — a dashboard counting total exercises in your library, total sets recorded, and a recent activity feed with weight, reps, and set count at a glance.
- Tips — six built-in guidance cards covering progressive overload, rest between sets (2–3 minutes for heavy compounds, 60–90 seconds for isolation), consistent tracking, proper warm-up, sleep and recovery (7–8 hours recommended), and using the notes field for RPE and technique observations.
Where it stacks up — and where it doesn't
The fitness tracking side handles its job competently: form fields are properly labelled, contrast between white text and dark backgrounds is strong, and the navigation state is clearly communicated through both colour and iconography. That said, the app does carry a real structural inconsistency worth flagging: the mixed functionality combining a construction-themed stacking game and a fitness tracker in a single package creates a navigation context that may disorient users who came only for the workout logging. The game portion, with its golden multiplier indicators and timing-based mechanics, also lacks any visible accessibility settings, audio cues, or alternative feedback for users with motor or visual impairments — a gap that stands out against the more considered design of the fitness screens.
The same logic in a different medium
The game sitting alongside the tracker is called Build Balance Rush — a construction crane stacking game rendered in vibrant 3D cartoon graphics with golden yellow, brick red, blue, and orange. A yellow and black striped crane hook lifts miniature buildings — green storefronts, hexagonal wooden structures, brick-and-circular-window blocks — and drops them into an ever-growing tower against a purple-pink sunset skyline. Golden multipliers (x50, x100, x200) float across the scene as coins spin around the stack. It's the same metaphor the fitness side is built on: one precise placement at a time, one set at a time, a tower rising through repetition.
The app's core idea — that recorded repetitions accumulate into something structural — comes through more clearly in the visual language of the game than in the tracker itself. Whether that parallel was intentional or incidental, it gives the two halves a conceptual coherence that isn't immediately obvious from the feature list.
App Technical Details
| App type | Workout tracker combined with construction-themed mobile game |
| Navigation structure | 3-tab bottom navigation: Exercises, Stats, Tips |
| Workout log fields | Date, Weight (kg), Reps, Sets, RPE (1–10, optional), Comment |
| Interface color scheme | Dark (anthracite) background with teal/emerald accent elements |
| Weight unit | Kilograms (kg) |
| Built-in training tips | 6 guidance cards: Progressive overload, Rest between sets, Track consistently, Warm up properly, Sleep and recovery, Use notes |
| Statistics dashboard | Tracks exercise library count, total logged sets, and recent activity log |
| Last updated | May 11, 2026 |
Your Questions Answered
How do I log a workout set in Tower Forges?
Does the app keep track of my personal records?
What overall statistics does Tower Forges display?
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