SmokeRevoke does what it says it’ll do: keep track of your smokes, how many you’ve skipped, and keep track of the time you have before you’re allowed to smoke again.
With that being said, one of my problems is the fact that you only get to use it for ONE day for free before you have to pay $12 for it. Normally this would turn me off and I wouldn’t even download SmokeRevoke in the first place. But I didn’t know that you could only use it ONE day for free, so I downloaded it. I thought it was pretty good and the reviews kept saying how AMAZING it was. So I opted to pay the $12. That was my bad. You really cannot judge whether an app like this is going to work for you with just one day of use.
When it comes down to it, it isn’t worth it for me.
I smoke in the middle of the night sometimes when I have insomnia and SmokeRevoke makes me start the day at 1:15 AM (for example) if I get up and can’t go back to sleep. But because my day actually starts at 7:30am, when I smoke in the middle of the night, SmokeRevoke says I can’t have another one until 8:15am because I just had my 7:30 one… even though it’s 1:15 in the morning. Then it marks a certain percentage off of your success rate because you’re not smoking when it tells you you’re allowed. And it seems like it doesn’t take into account for your success rate that you may have actually smoked LESS than the day before, only that you weren’t smoking when you were allowed.
All in all, it’s an okay app. It just doesn’t fit with my habits and how I think a gradual system should work.