
Misophonia Smash
iPhone / Style de vie
Misophonia Smash: A Neuroscientifically Questionable Yet Oddly Satisfying Way to Cope
If the sound of chewing makes you want to fight gravity or you’re convinced that pen-clickers are agents of chaos, congratulations—you might have Misophonia, a real neurological condition where everyday sounds trigger not-so-everyday rage.
This app won’t cure you. There’s no peer-reviewed evidence for that (yet). But it will let you tap, swipe, and smash your way through the most aggravating triggers in human existence—from chip bags to ticking clocks—with zero cleanup and zero social consequence.
Core Features:
• Tap-to-smash interaction that breaks your stress, not your phone
• Toggle haptic feedback for extra sensory revenge
• Customizable trigger list stored securely on your device
• A clean interface that won’t trigger you further
• Built-in empathy tool disguised as a polite info screen
Whether you’re neurodivergent, highly sensitive, or just over it, Misophonia Smash is your non-prescription path to short-term emotional stability.
Now go ahead—smash like your sanity depends on it!
Quoi de neuf dans la dernière version ?
What’s New in Version 2.1
This is our biggest update yet! Misophonia Smash 2.1 adds major upgrades, new features, and a whole lot more smashing:
• Two New Triggers:
• Clicking Clock – Because tick-tock shouldn’t equal rage.
• Shuffling Feet – For those who walk like they’re dragging regrets.
• Haptic Feedback Toggle:
Feel every smash with optional haptic pulses—or turn them off if you’ve had enough sensations for one day.
• Trigger Personalization:
You can now add, edit, and delete your own personal triggers in the new Settings page. Finally, a place for “chewing ice” or “dad’s whistle-breathing.”
• Multilingual Empathy:
The “What Is Misophonia?” explainer is now available in 8 languages (English, Español, Deutsch, Français, 简体中文, Tagalog, Finnish, Swedish) so others can read before they chew—wherever they’re from.
• Accessibility & UI Improvements:
Sharper headers, cleaner buttons, better layouts—and slightly fewer ways to accidentally trigger yourself.
• Core Data Stability Fixes:
We finally taught the app how to remember things—like your triggers—without crashing halfway through a thought.