Answers
Frequently asked questions
Everything we get asked about Kibun's mood tracker, habit correlations, AI reports, and how the privacy model actually works.
No. Kibun is a wellness and self-reflection tool. It is not a medical device and does not diagnose, treat, or prevent any condition. If you are in crisis, please contact a local emergency line or trusted clinician.
No. Kibun is anonymous-first — you can use the entire app without creating an account. Your data lives on your device. Optional Pro features sync via Supabase if you sign in.
Kibun is available on iPhone, iPad, and Android — and runs first-class on tablets.
Yes. Pro users can export their full mood history as CSV at any time, including notes, habits, and life events.
Anonymous-first. Raw note text is never sent to the AI — we only use anonymized signals for weekly and monthly reports. Analytics are privacy-first via Vexo. Full details on the privacy page.
Subscriptions are managed by Google Play (Android) or the App Store (iOS). Cancel from your store profile under Subscriptions, at least 24 hours before your trial or period ends to avoid the next charge.
When you track a habit (sleep, exercise, meditation, anything custom) alongside your moods, Kibun computes a Pearson correlation between your daily habit values and your daily mood score. A strong positive correlation means more of that habit tends to coincide with better moods; a strong negative correlation means the opposite. It's pattern surfacing — not causal proof — and Kibun shows the strength so you can decide what to act on.
Resilience is a 0–100 score reflecting how quickly you tend to bounce back from difficult moods. Kibun looks at sequences in your check-ins — how often a negative-group mood is followed within a day or two by a positive-group mood — and weights more recent weeks more heavily. The score moves slowly on purpose; a single bad week shouldn't tank your number.
No. Notes are completely optional. A single tap on a mood bubble is a complete check-in. When you do write a note, an on-device sentiment model labels it (positive / neutral / negative) so the AI report can use it without ever sending raw text to the cloud.
Daylio focuses on logging speed and ten-mood pickers. Kibun keeps the fast logging but adds: fourteen colour-coded moods grouped by emotional family, a habit-tracking sister feature, life-event tagging, Pearson correlations between habits and moods, an AI weekly/monthly report tuned to your profile, a resilience score, and a Year in Mood recap. Both are anonymous-first.
Yes. The entire free tier (mood check-ins, calendar, history, charts, exercises, achievements) runs locally on your device. AI reports are the only feature that requires connectivity, and they sync when you're back online.
Pro users can add any habit they want — boolean (did / didn't) or 1–5 scale. Common picks: sleep hours, exercise sessions, screen time, hydration, meditation, time with friends. Each habit shows up in the correlation view next to your moods.
The app respects your system theme on both iOS and Android. The website's editorial cream palette is set to light only — dark mode for the marketing site is on the roadmap.