Why switch
A literal interlocking-chain metaphor instead of an abstract heatmap grid — you see the streak you're protecting.
Skip and repair credits mean one missed day leaves a visibly mended link, not a silent hole.
Friends and a weekly leaderboard add the accountability HabitKit's solo tracking doesn't offer.
Chain modes (strict, balanced, flexible) let you choose how forgiving each habit is.
| Comparison point | Zinciri Kırma | HabitKit |
|---|---|---|
| Visualization | Literal interlocking chain with 10 day-states | GitHub-style heatmap grid |
| Missed day | Skip/repair credits keep the chain, day shows as mended | The grid simply shows an empty cell |
| Forgiveness | Strict, balanced, and flexible chain modes | No forgiveness or auto-skip system |
| Social | Friends + weekly leaderboard | Solo tracking, no social features |
| Platforms | iOS, Android, and web | iOS and Android |
| Price | Generous free tier, optional subscription | Free tier plus a one-time purchase option |
Verdict
HabitKit is genuinely one of the best-looking trackers out there, and its one-time purchase is a real advantage if you dislike subscriptions and love the heatmap look. If that's you, stay. But if you want a forgiving chain that survives a bad day, friends to compete with, and a streak you can actually feel, Zinciri Kırma is built around exactly that.