A map shows where. A passport shows when, and how it felt. Worldly keeps both, because the globe lighting up is only half the joy of looking back.
More than a dot on a map
In Worldly, every visit can carry a travel date, notes, and photos, so each entry is a memory rather than a pin. Your passport becomes a dated log of where you have been and what it meant.
Progress you can feel
Alongside the log, progress rings track countries, continents, states, and cities visited, and optional anniversary reminders resurface a trip on the day you took it years ago.
It is the grown-up version of a shoebox of ticket stubs, except it is searchable and it never fades.
And it is genuinely yours: visits, notes, and photos are stored locally with SwiftData, with no account and no company server.
Bring your own key, no backend
There is no HogWatch server, no proxy, and no account. Here is what "bring your own key" means for your data, and why it is the safer architecture.
Your Lore Book: a record worth keeping
Every quest you finish becomes a Lore Card with a photo, a note, and a rating - a gallery of what you actually did, not what you posted.
Offline-first is a feature, not a fallback
For most apps, "works offline" means "degrades politely when the wifi drops." For Flowstate apps, offline is the default - and that one choice shapes everything else.