Company Name: 28 Wellness, LLC
About: Get daily exercise videos, nutrition profiles, and emotional insights customized
to your body's natural cycle.
28 is the world's first cycle-based fitness and
wellness experience offering cycle tracking, transformative exercises, nutrition
profiles, and science-backed emotional insights, all hyper-personalized to where
you are in your natural cycle and controlled by you.
The following contact options are available: Pricing Information, Support, General Help, and Press Information/New Coverage (to guage reputation). Discover which options are the fastest to get your customer service issues resolved.
NOTE: If the links below doesn't work for you, Please go directly to the Homepage of 28 Wellness, LLC
E-Mail: it@28.co
Website: 🌍 Visit 28 Cycle Syncing Wellness Website
Privacy Policy: https://28.co/privacy
Developer: 28 Wellness LLC
by ZKech
Not a reliable tracked and cycle syncing method. I wanted to love it but how can I if it says that ovulation phase lasts for a week? Is this a joke? Ovulation is a one day event. With energy of a “tiger bombshell” lasting for about 3 days max before ovulation and maybe a bit after. That’s it. So if some of you are in your luteal phase but read recommendations and see that you still should feel like a tiger bombshell, it’s not you. It’s the app. There are basically 2 phases. Follicular and Luteal with ovulation in between. Simple. Energy around ovulation is high, and is low around menstruation. Also, according to this app luteal phase lasts for a week only? It’s half of your cycle, ladies. If you like a science based app and not just a cocktail of someone’s idea of a female cycle, maybe this is not the right choice. It’s hard to take any recommendation seriously when basic biological timeline is being disregarded.
by Mermaid1897
I really wanted to like this app. So much so that even despite the expensive cost, I tried the free version for a few weeks. In the end, i decided not to upgrade to premium and will probably delete the app altogether. The concept is so amazing - syncing your nutrition and exercise with your cycle! We women should all learn to live like that and I was so excited to have tips and guidance. I was so disappointed and honestly so shocked when I opened the app and was bombarded with images of barely clothed, toned, fit women sometimes in even almost pornographic poses. It’s so weird to have these images in an app I want to use to help improve my health and well-being. When I go in the app to log bloating and cramps, I don’t want to see a flat belly in a bikini! It’s so strange, the images must be AI generated I’m assuming, because surely a human would realize that we don’t want to see that. Womens bodies are beautiful, but I didn’t download this app to look at them.
by KikiTheSunBird
This app has a great concept that is highly needed and useful, but I can barely use it without cringing constantly because the app design is so, so bad.
Is your very specific aesthetic 90s-thin white women in the jungle? I hope so! Because that’s all you’re getting. Just lots, and lots, of super thin, half naked white women in jungle settings. There’s one frolicking in the bushes. There’s another under a waterfall. They’ll throw a couple beach settings in for good measure, don’t worry. Oh, but yeah, still no diversity in body sizes or skin colors. That would be going wayyyy too far for this developer.
It’s just sooooo dated and cringey. I feel like I’m flipping through a magazine in the 90s that’s chomping at the bit to tell me what “love handles” are and how to use a donut to spice things up in bed.
Outside of that is some good content about what to actually expect during your cycle, followed by try-hard copy under Insights that knows how to procure a good eye roll. It’s not straight up cringe like the app design, but it’s absolutely lacking in any real depth and substance. I would bet money it’s AI generated content produced en mass.
So yeah, if you’re in the very narrow target audience for this app’s aesthetic, you’re golden! For everyone else who lives in the 21st Century and can’t stand the secondhand embarrassment you get when you see design choices like this, uh, good luck.