Physics you can feel. A mobile app that teaches the physics behind every sport — by letting you play with the real forces, not read about them.
"You don't learn the arc of a shot from a formula. You learn it by missing."
Built at the Apple Developer Academy — where design and code ship together. Phisios turns physics from a textbook into a thing you do with your thumbs.
Instead of formulas, you get sports: line up a basketball shot, bend a free-kick, loose an arrow. Tune the angle, the spin, the power — watch the real physics decide whether you score. A daily quiz keeps the concepts sticky with a streak you don't want to break.
Physics loses people because it's abstract — symbols on a page with no feel for what they do. But everyone already has physics in their hands: every shot, kick and throw is projectile motion, spin and gravity at work.
So the design leads with play. Each sport is a focused simulator — a few honest sliders (angle, spin, power, holdover) and a single Shoot. The interface gets out of the way: a dark stage, one orange accent for the thing you're tuning, bold condensed type that feels like sport, not school.
Every sport follows the same rhythm — set the scene, tune the shot, take it. Learn the pattern once and physics does the rest.

Distance, hoop height, gravity, angle. Drop it through the arc — or watch it clang.

Power, direction, spin. Bend a free-kick around the wall the way Magnus force really does it.

Holdover and power against range and gravity. Aim with physics, not with luck.

A daily quiz turns the feeling into understanding — one sharp question, a running streak, the concept locked in for good.
A focused dark system: near-black stages so the action stands out, a single charged orange for whatever you're tuning, and a bold condensed display face that carries the sporting energy. Consistent sliders and a single primary action across every sport.