DayBlocks - Visualize Time
Estimates
low confidenceASO analysis
Good use of the title field.
Could go longer. The first 252 chars are above-the-fold; everything else still indexes.
Used by similar apps in your niche, but not in your title or description. Adding these (where genuinely relevant) can broaden your search reach.
Words you and your peers both use. Confirms positioning in this niche.
Keyword rankings
iTunes Search · top 200About
DayBlocks turns your existing calendar into countdowns you can actually see. Time can feel slippery. "In three weeks" might as well be "never" — until suddenly it's tomorrow and you're scrambling. DayBlocks fixes that. Each upcoming event becomes a stack of colored blocks, one per day, sorted by what's next. The closer the event, the brighter the warning. The further out, the calmer the cue. It's the simplest way to make time feel real. — FEATURES — - Reads from your existing calendars connected to your apple calendar(iCloud, Google, Outlook — anything connected to your iPhone). No second calendar to maintain. - Glanceable countdowns from today to 30 days out. Past 30 days, events stay quietly in your calendar where they belong. - Color-coded urgency: red for today and tomorrow, orange for the coming week, green for further out. The block visualization tells you "soon" before you've even read the event name. - Home screen widgets in three sizes — small, medium, and large — so what's coming is always one glance away. No need to open the app. - Filter which calendars appear. Family, work, holidays — toggle each on or off so DayBlocks only shows what matters to you. - Built for the way time blinded brains actually work. No notifications, no clutter, no productivity guilt. Just a clearer view of your time. — PRIVACY — DayBlocks reads your calendars only to display them. Your events stay on your device. Nothing is sent to any server, sold to anyone, or stored outside your iPhone. No account required, no login, no tracking. — PERFECT FOR — - Anyone with ADHD or time blindness who needs to see time, not just count it - Parents tracking kids' birthdays, appointments, and school events - Students with deadlines that always feel further away than they are - Anyone who's ever forgotten their car registration was due