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This flower identification app turns every walk into Pokémon Go for plants

flormie lets iPhone users scan flowers, save them as collectibles, and build a calmer kind of real-world collection game.

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Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone
Joan Li

A new flower identification app wants daily walks to feel a little more like Pokémon Go, only with fewer raids and far less public phone shouting.

flormie is an iPhone app built around a simple loop. Find a flower outside, scan it, and add it to a growing collection. That turns a normal walk into a low-pressure nature hunt, without pretending every sidewalk needs battle mechanics.

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It feels closer to a field journal with game instincts than another plant encyclopedia. The app is free on the App Store, with optional scan packs available through in-app purchases.

i designed and built a flower identification app that turns every flower you find into a collectible 🌸

– 200+ downloads in the first 3 days of soft launch
– built with @OpenAI codex + @cursor_ai + @figma
– pretty proud of my first indie app :)

app store link below 👇 pic.twitter.com/rPKrIwkprK

— Joan Li (@JoanLi223) July 2, 2026

How the collection loop works

flormie doesn’t need to turn flowers into monsters to make the idea click. The reward is the collection itself. Each scan becomes a small record of something real you noticed outside, which gives the app a job beyond answering a basic plant ID question.

That is where the Pokémon Go comparison works best. It gives ordinary walks a tiny objective, but skips the competitive noise and social pressure of a full location game. You’re still looking at the real world. The phone just gives you a reason to pay attention.

Why flormie works better small

flormie’s appeal is restraint. It doesn’t try to become a social feed or a plant-parenting dashboard that nags you when a ficus looks sad.

The app is listed for iPhone and iPad, and its App Store privacy label lists no data collected by the developer. That fits the whole idea. A flower identification app doesn’t need half your digital life to tell you that you just walked past something pretty.

The latest version also adds photo album uploads, so flormie isn’t limited to live scanning. A picture from a walk or trip can still become part of the collection later.

Where the flower hunt could grow

The main risk is reliability and free-version friction. A collection loop falls apart if flower scans feel shaky or scan limits arrive before the habit does.

That habit is the real test, as flormie doesn’t need leaderboards or another social feed bolted on later. It needs to make people notice flowers they would have ignored five minutes earlier.

That’s the useful phone trick here. For anyone tired of apps that turn every spare second into screen time, flormie points the camera outward and rewards looking around first.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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