It’s great to hear about your plans for expanding the interactive elements of HabiTron’s garden feature, will the upcoming plant types, such as roses and tulips, be tied to specific types of habits, like productivity or health?
If I understand you clearly you mean I will use my virtual plants to claim coins In the future right?
Thank you so much, yes, we will definitely provide support for users who need help or have questions. We’ll have clear guides, FAQs, and an active community to assist users, ensuring that everyone can smoothly set goals, track progress, and stay on course with their habits.
The habits and garden features are separate parts of HabiTron, so for now the plant types like roses and tulips won’t be tied to specific habit categories.
The garden is more of a fun, gamified way to keep users engaged and motivated to return regularly, but it doesn’t directly connect to the type of habits being tracked. Instead, users can grow any plant they choose as they consistently track their habits
Not exactly, let’s describe again. The virtual plants in the garden feature are separate from earning or claiming coins. The plants grow as you return regularly to track your habits, but claiming coins is a different feature.
You’ll be able to claim coins at regular intervals, regardless of the plant’s growth. The garden is more about adding a fun, visual way to stay engaged while building habits.
How will you motivate users to keep engaging with the project and tracking their habits
Again, what methods will you be implementing to help users in tracking their habits effectively. Will there be reminders or analytics to help them understand their progress?
Okay I gets you but what is the essence value of tracking habits asides fun ?
Thank you for the response sir.
Any future plans for all the collection of coin? If it is just for fun me I can’t relate. So sir what is the important
If it a game like hamster you should make it rewarding not for fun or is they any plan creating your own token?
It’s a creative idea to follow regular habits, claim coins at regular intervals and use it to improve our garden.
I had the opportunity to test the site, you really put in a good effort. I saw that you will add new flowers and seasonal activities too. It seemed interesting compared to other habit platforms. Good luck team
Good morning @Youngyuppie,
So basically, users who come every day or at regular intervals will be able to claim. With these claims, they will be able to develop and beautify their HabiTron gardens. You can think of this as games like “Pou” or “My Talking Tom”. In this way, we aim to create a special bond with the platform for users. This is our plan for Reminder part.
In the second part, as users enter each of their habits on the monthly track side, the line graph will be automatically arranged and will take shape according to the number of checkboxes for the habits made differently according to the days. In this way, the user will see their own development and will be even more motivated. As in the figure (think of it increasing day by day)
Good morning @Nweke-nature1.com
Some people, including my teammate and I, may have difficulty forming new habits. For example, starting to read books, finding motivation to do sports, etc.
Our mission is to have a platform where people can improve themselves and follow this regularly, and to gamify this by connecting to a garden that has a special meaning. After all, we are looking for feedbacks regularly and adding what users wants more.
Good morning @Relate101, let’s answer quickly
While the coins in HabiTron are currently meant for fun and to encourage users to regularly engage with the platform, we do have bigger plans for sure.
For example, in future, we aim to introduce more meaningful uses for the coins, possibly tying them to rewards, achievements, or even integrating a token system to add more value. Right now we used BTT as users are used to it. Soon we’ll implement our own token.
Okay! Thank you for taking your time to answer my questions. I wish you and your team the best
I had a chance to try habitron. What I can say is that you thought it well. I add 5 habits for now, will be following weekly. For garden part, I’ll be waiting more fun. All the best
Ohhh really nice to see that you enjoyed the platform and start to use it, for garden part we will make u excited, promise
Usually app like this can just use local or centralised database to track ours which is faster and better UX bcause no hassle of popup wallet for tx, for approval, for sign msg. So whats ur plan to compete with other app that offer better user flow?
@Genz210 Hello
We’ve read your previous messages too and all of your questions are on point and so accurate. So first of all, we respect your reviews. Let’s answer your question in detail.
Our short answer is, yes as you can guess, “blockchain”.
Our long answer:
It’s absolutely true pointing out that centralized apps offer faster, more straightforward user flows, but at HabiTron, we’ve intentionally chosen a decentralized approach for several reasons that go beyond just tracking habits:
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First, data privacy and ownership are key principles. In most of the habit tracking apps, your data is stored in a company’s database, and while this can offer speed, it comes with risks of data breaches, third-party access, and misuse. By using BTTC blockchain, we ensure that users have full control over their data—no middlemen, no hidden access. Every action and piece of data is stored securely on-chain, as a creator of HabiTron, we don’t even have a right to reach to your habit names, checkbox, etc. if you check our smart contracts (no view for storage from our side or any side).
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We understand that the UX hurdle of wallet pop-ups and approvals can be a pain point. That’s why we are actively optimizing the flow to minimize the number of transactions and approvals needed. For example, batching multiple updates into a single transaction where possible, and only requesting user signatures when absolutely necessary. So basically instead of asking confirmation on blockchain for every habit add/remove/checkboxs, we just ask it once while user is saving all of it.
In summary, HabiTron isn’t just about tracking habits. It’s about ensuring data privacy, and building a system that rewards users in a fun way(garden), trustless manner, with a UX that we are constantly refining to match centralized platforms. We believe that as the value of data ownership becomes more recognized, our approach will stand out as the future-proof solution.
We hope that it was a great way to explain our perspective & vision on HabiTron.
Alright no problems. Thanks for making it clear and simple to understand this better. Wishing you all the best sir
Blockchain for data privacy is completely wrong.
I think, you might mistook the blockchain security. I took the quote from others here:
- Blockchain is secure when handling data mutability, requiring more than 50% of nodes to be compromised for changes to occur.
- Blockchain isn’t secure when it comes to data privacy.
Blockchain is primarily focused on transparency, which can create tension with privacy needs. Even it’s all encrypted and all in bytes, I still can access from the raw tx inputs. This is lead to the birth of subgraph and other indexing platforms
Or you can google why blockchain isnt for data privacy
For example:
So, there is a distinction between anonymity and pseudonymity too. Many platforms advise against storing highly sensitive data, such as private keys and passwords, because even moderately sensitive data is often secured on centralized servers. However, your technology doesn’t securely store moderately sensitive data; instead, it exposes it to the blockchain ecosystem and all the user habits history, this could lead to crime. Knowing the habit of target’s activity is perfect pattern to exploitation.
For e.g as hacker i can actually send tx request when user want to sign some txs and change the nominal, yes as hacker you can push tx request to the wallet. This is happened in 2023 with my prev team even when it was multi sig. so reminder to always check the exact msg, and cancel the not intended signature bcause as hacker, we can use this in the future too.
Or simply knowing activity when user coming home can lead house robbery.
Also for UX, there is actually better flow to automate that, but feel free to find out what it is. For hints, OKX implemented this EIP
Thanks for your comment @Genz210
Let’s explain step by step for what is misunderstood for our project since we agree with you.
It is true that blockchain prioritizes transparency and immutability over privacy by default. However, we address this concern by designing HabiTron to avoid storing sensitive personal information on-chain. Our platform is built to store habit status (completion data), not real names, addresses, or personal identifiers, thus keeping user data pseudonymous. Habit names and any identifiable information remain off-chain to prevent unauthorized access or pattern recognition.
Of course you can see the habits on the blockchain because when you come back to the site it is loaded. But you cannot see what habit someone(as personal id, it is just any random wallet) has because we only connect it to a random wallet address that the user chooses.
One of the commenter’s valid concerns is the potential to exploit patterns from user activity. To mitigate this, we do not store timestamps of specific habit completion. The activity logged is generalized and unrelated to real-world actions like “leaving home” or “arriving at a specific time.”
Moreover, according to that logic, habit platforms that are not on the entire blockchain are much more dangerous. Because people register with their email addresses and what they do is kept on the server. (It is usually sold to third parties for money due to advertisement reasons and profits over data)
The example about a hacker sending a malicious transaction request is concerning but highlights a broader issue of wallet security, not a flaw in blockchain privacy itself. We urge users to be cautious when signing any transaction—this is true for all blockchain platforms, not just HabiTron.
As an extra, not only on our platform, users should not randomly enter their private information on any platform.
We want to see for instance those:
- Morning Exercise – A great way to track fitness goals.
- Drink Water – To ensure proper hydration throughout the day.
- Read for 30 Minutes – Encouraging daily learning.
- Meditate – Promoting mindfulness and mental health.
- No Sugar – Tracking dietary changes or health goals.
- Write a Journal Entry – Reflecting on the day.
- Go for a Walk – Simple and effective movement goals.
- Learn a New Skill – Commit time daily to skill-building.
- Stretch Before Bed – A calming habit for relaxation.
Not those:
(everyone should save those type of data locally, neither in blockchain nor servers)
- Track Blood Sugar Levels – Specific to managing diabetes or health conditions.
- Attend Therapy Session – Personal mental health tracking.
- Visit a Doctor – Tracking medical appointments or health check-ups.
- Log Family Time – Tracking interactions with family members.
- Fertility Treatment Schedule – For those undergoing medical treatments.
- Track Anxiety Episodes – Monitoring mental health progress.
- Complete Divorce Paperwork – Related to personal legal situations.
- Track Alcohol Consumption – A personal habit for reducing alcohol intake.
- Prepare for Court Hearing – Tracking legal case preparation.
We are also continually improving our security measures and plan to offer a robust, user-friendly experience that educates users on how to safely interact with blockchain technology.
On the other hand, we will definitely evaluate this recommendation.
As we evolve, we may explore implementing automation features, such as meta-transactions and EIP solutions, to streamline the user experience without sacrificing the core values of decentralization.