An app by Satyam Technologies Private Limited
Breathe. Slow down.
Begin again.
A calm, offline-first breathing and meditation app for Android. Ten guided rhythms, five animation styles, build-your-own routines, and a private practice history — all on your device.
Everything you need to breathe well
Simple tools, thoughtfully designed. Nothing in the way.
10 guided rhythms
Box Breathing, 4-7-8, Vagus Nerve, and more — ready to use from the first tap.
5 animation styles
Circle, Petal, Rose, Lotus, and Line diagram — switch any time, mid-session.
Your own rhythms
Design custom breathing patterns with your own colors, timings, and sounds.
Multi-step routines
Chain rhythms, pauses, notes, audio, and video into a guided ritual that plays itself.
Practice history
See your week at a glance. Track breath time, cycles, and sessions — all on device.
Reminders
Gentle nudges — once, daily, or on the weekdays you choose. They survive a reboot.
Lock-screen controls
Play, pause, and stop without unlocking. Sessions survive the screen going dark.
Ambient sounds
Background music, breathing cues, and hold sounds — bring your own or use presets.
Included rhythms
Ten presets to start with — numbers are inhale · hold · exhale · hold, in seconds. Create your own when you're ready.
Free, with optional Premium
Every breathing rhythm, your routines, reminders, and your private history work offline at no cost. Premium adds all five animation styles, unlimited routines, advanced color customization, and routine sharing — billed monthly or yearly through Google Play, no free trial, cancel anytime.
Private by default
No analytics. No ads. No trackers. Your rhythms, history, and uploads stay on your device unless you choose to sign in.
About
RhythmicFlow is developed and published by Satyam Technologies Private Limited, based in Patna, India. We build calm, privacy-respecting tools for everyday wellbeing.
Contact: info@satyamtechnologies.net
Support
We reply to every email, and we read every bug report.
Found something broken or have a feature idea? Open an issue — no account needed to browse, a free GitHub account to file one.