Free update. No subscription required. Just the app, working, getting better.
Pick one memory that matters most. Watch it pulse with breathing glow. Single-focus constraint keeps you honest.
Sharp gradient effects. Better dark mode fade visibility. Cleaner everywhere.
Expanded insight descriptions. Memory health score that actually helps.
Several bug fixes to make the app experience more coherent.
"Seven memories maximum. Two movement modes. One focus at a time. Constraint as liberation for spatial thinkers."
Probably not.
This is for spatial thinkers who:
One-time purchase. Constraint as liberation. Truth over metrics.
Spatial memory. Your way.
Memories drift and settle organically. They gently separate when crowded. Natural collision detection. Living, breathing workspace.
Precise positioning. No collisions. Structured thinking. Deliberate organization.
Both work with how your mind actually remembers—through position, proximity, and visual relationships.
Pick one memory that matters most. Watch it pulse. Automatic importance promotion. Single-focus constraint.
Constraint breeds focus. Privacy first. Your memories, your way.
Prevents overwhelm. Visual fading shows what's becoming less important. Reinforcement keeps thoughts fresh. Constraint breeds focus.
Text, photos, audio recordings, important links. Everything in one spatial system.
Tap the brain icon. See when memories fade. Track which thoughts you return to most. Get your memory garden health score. Discover patterns without judgment.
Your device only. No cloud sync, no data collection, no tracking. Export anytime.
Other note apps give you infinite folders, unlimited tags, endless organization anxiety. They think more features means better tools.
Memory Anchor thinks the opposite. Seven memories forces focus. Two movement modes serve different thinking styles. Constraint as liberation.
One-time purchase. No subscriptions. No premium tiers. Already updated with Set Focus after six implementation attempts. Just the app, working, getting better.
Your memories are yours to organize, not ours to analyze.