Daychain
Use Cases

Gym Consistency: Tracking Reps, Sets, and Minutes

Log workouts as count (sets and reps) or duration (minutes), and let Balanced mode protect one missed gym day a week without breaking your chain.

Gym consistency rarely fails because of one bad week — it fails because a single missed session gets treated as proof the whole habit collapsed. Daychain gives you two task types built for this: a count task if you think in sets and reps (log '4 sets' or '60 reps' and the day completes once you hit the number), or a duration task if you think in time (log workout minutes toward a daily or weekly target). Neither forces you into a same binary 'did I go or not' box that erases how much you actually did. For the chain mode, Balanced is the natural fit: it keeps the daily accountability of a real chain but grants a small number of automatic skips each week, so a genuinely sore, sick, or overbooked day doesn't read as a broken link. Save skip credits for the rest day you already know is coming — a deload week, a flight — and keep repair credits in reserve for the day you meant to train and simply forgot to log it. Over months, your chain segment history becomes a record you can point to: the six-week run last spring still counts, even if this run only started three weeks ago.

Get Daychain on your phone

Turn your habits into a chain, forge every day into a link, and never break the chain. Free to download, start in seconds.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

Available on the App Store and Google Play

Free to download, no ads
Works on iPhone and Android
Your chain synced across devices
powered by