Pillar 05 · Gamification
Quiet motivation, never streak shame.
Per-habit and global streaks, celebrations at meaningful milestones, and a 365-day pixel calendar — so your consistency is something you can see.

Ameleva's gamification layer ships per-habit and global streaks, milestone celebrations at 7, 14, 30, 60, and 100 days, and a 365-day pixel calendar heatmap that visualizes a full year of practice. Streaks pause rather than reset on missed days, so a single bad week does not undo months of consistency. There are no public leaderboards, no streak-risk push notifications, and no comparison metrics by default. Available on iOS and Android.
Why this way
Motivation without manipulation.
Pixel calendar over progress bars
A 365-day pixel calendar shows a full year of practice — one pixel per day, intensity as value.
Streaks pause, never reset
Miss a day and the streak pauses, not resets. Streaks encourage consistency, not punish a bad week.
Milestones, not goals
Celebrations trigger at 7, 14, 30, 60, and 100 days — milestones aligned with peer-reviewed habit-formation timelines, not arbitrary goalposts.
FAQ
Gamification, asked.
- Why do streaks pause instead of reset?
- Because a single missed day shouldn't erase 60 days of practice. Pausing preserves the signal of long-term consistency without the punitive reset that drives shame and abandonment.
- Can I disable celebrations?
- Yes. Settings → Motivation → Celebration animations off. Streaks still count silently.
- Why these specific milestones?
- 7 and 14 days mark short-term consistency, 30 the one-month mark, 60 anchors the ~66-day median habit-formation point from peer-reviewed research, and 100 marks long-term integration.
Watch the pixel calendar fill in.
7-day free trial. Unlimited habits, 365 pixels each.
What we don't do
Things Ameleva intentionally does not ship.
- No public leaderboards on personal habits
- No streak-risk re-engagement notifications
- No 'last seen 2 days ago' nudges
- No streak-purchase or streak-freeze in-app currency
- No follower counts or social comparison metrics