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An app for autistic kids aged 5 to 12. A curated library of short comic strips, each one carrying one small social-emotional skill. We pick the next story to fit where your kid is, not to fit a sales metric.
Each story has one multiple-choice question. After they answer, the app explains why in plain language, not a "great job!" jingle. Then it serves the next one.
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Autistic kids 5 to 12 and the people raising them. Also used by SLPs, BCBAs, OTs and special educators as something to send home between sessions instead of a worksheet.
It isn't a diagnostic tool. It doesn't replace your therapist. If a salesperson tells you an app can do either of those things, walk away from that salesperson.
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About 29.99 SAR a month (roughly $8). One subscription per child. No card-on-file shenanigans, no free-trial countdown emails. Cancel any time from Settings.
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From a curated library we build and review ourselves. Every story is written, illustrated and checked by humans before it shows up in the app. We're not shipping anything we wouldn't read to our own kid.
The app picks the next story to fit the skill your kid is working on and the level they're at. The social-emotional concept underneath is what changes; the wrapper just keeps the read engaging.
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No limit. A story is about 3 minutes. We pre-load the next one in the background, so when they tap "next" it's already there waiting. No spinner, no lag, no losing the moment.
Therapists tend to suggest 1 to 3 stories a day, every day. That beats once-a-week binges for actually transferring skills.
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The app tracks 12 separate skills (emotion recognition, false belief, hidden feelings, etc.) and quietly estimates how your kid is doing on each. Get a few right in a row on one skill, the next story bumps up. Get a few wrong, it drops back down. Each skill moves independently. Your kid might be a 6 on emotion recognition and a 2 on perspective-taking.
At the lower levels, everything is literal. No idioms, no sarcasm, no "her face fell." Non-literal language only shows up around level 5, when it's the thing being taught.
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Yes. There's a "Choose" button inside the story screen. Pick one of the 12 skills (sensory overload, false belief, emotional regulation, whatever) and the next few stories will all be about that. Useful when your kid's therapist says "this week, work on perspective-taking."
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The right answer shows. Underneath, a short plain explanation: "The girl felt embarrassed because everyone was looking at her." No buzzer. No red X. They tap "Got it" and move on.
If they get three wrong in a row, the app stops and walks them through a breathing exercise before offering the next one. Frustration breeds shutdown. This is the cheap insurance against that.
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There's a Parent section behind a PIN you set. Accuracy on each of the 12 skills, what level they're on, day streak, and the full list of every question they got wrong with the right answer shown. You can export the whole thing as a PDF and hand it to a speech therapist next Tuesday.
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The kid's first name, their age, the interests you typed in, and which answers they picked. That's it. No photos. No microphone. No location. No biometrics. No third-party advertising SDKs.
If you ever contact us, that email lives in a different table and is never joined to a child profile. We're not selling anyone's data. Not ever. Not "anonymized." Not "to research partners."
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Settings → Data & Privacy → Delete all data. One tap, one confirmation, gone from our servers. No "we'll keep a backup for 30 days" small print.
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Social Scenarios. 16 short real-life situations. Someone bumps into you. Your friend won't share. You're invited but don't want to go. Pick a response, see why it works (or doesn't).
Calm Zone. Three guided breaks the kid can run alone: bubble breathing (4 in, 4 hold, 4 out, five rounds), 5-4-3-2-1 grounding, and a body squeeze-and-release.
Feelings Journal. Daily one-tap check-in. Eight feelings, three intensity levels ("a little / kind of / a lot"). The history lives in the parent section so you can see Monday-the-13th was rough before anyone mentioned it.
Voice narration on every word. Every caption, every question, every answer choice is read aloud. Especially matters for kids who use AAC or aren't reading yet.
14 languages. Arabic, English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Hindi, Russian, Turkish, Indonesian. Arabic is native (the story is written in Arabic, not translated badly).
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Minimal animation everywhere. Nothing flashes. Nothing autoplays at volume. The app honours your phone's "reduce motion" setting. Inside the app you can pick reduced, soft or full motion separately, switch on large text, toggle high contrast, kill haptics, mute narration.
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No. It's the thing you do between sessions, not instead of them. Your therapist diagnoses, plans, intervenes, adjusts. We just give your kid a way to keep practising the same skill on a Tuesday at 4pm when there's no therapist in the room.