Strides earned its reputation by doing one thing well: giving you a clean, analytics-rich iOS dashboard for tracking habits and goals. Four goal types, detailed streak visualization, customizable reminders — it's a well-designed app for people who want to see their habits clearly.
Buffy approaches habit tracking from the other direction. No dashboard to open, no app to check. Instead, it sends conversational reminders in Telegram, Slack, or ChatGPT, builds memory of your behavioral patterns, and adapts based on what actually happened.
Both help you build habits. They do it differently enough that the right choice depends almost entirely on how you prefer to interact with your behavior system.
What Strides is built for
Strides is a dedicated iOS habit and goal tracker centered on visibility and measurement.
- Four goal types: Build a Habit, Quit a Habit, Reach a Target, Maintain an Average
- Streak tracking with visual charts and trend lines
- Daily reminders with custom notification times per habit
- Habit score and weekly performance dashboard
- Notes and history for each habit entry
- iOS and iPadOS (no Android, no web)
Strides is optimized for people who:
- Want a polished, dedicated app for managing habits
- Prefer data-rich habit reviews with charts and scores
- Track a mix of binary habits (did/didn't) and numerical targets (steps, calories, sleep hours)
- Review their habit history regularly and use the data to make decisions
What Strides doesn't do:
- Send reminders anywhere except iOS notifications
- Adapt reminder timing based on your actual patterns
- Build memory of skips, snoozes, or behavioral context over time
- Work across Telegram, Slack, or ChatGPT
- Handle tasks, routines, or multi-step workflows
- Integrate with team or developer tooling
What Buffy is built for
Buffy is built around behavioral consistency through adaptive reminders and memory — not a dashboard you check, but an agent that follows you.
- Habits with flexible time windows, not fixed notification times
- Done / skip / snooze logging with accumulated behavioral history
- Three-layer memory: short-term context, episodic event log, semantic pattern learning
- Conversational reminders in Telegram, Slack, or ChatGPT — where you already are
- Adaptation: timing and tone adjust as your patterns become clear
- Routines that group habits into sequences (morning startup, weekly review, QBR prep)
- Tasks and deadlines, not just recurring habits
- OpenClaw integration for workflow and developer contexts
Buffy is optimized for people who:
- Don't want to open a separate app to maintain a habit system
- Need reminders to arrive in Telegram or Slack, not just iOS notifications
- Have structured work routines that mix habits, tasks, and one-off items
- Want a system that gets better at nudging them specifically, not just everyone the same way
What Buffy doesn't do well:
- Rich visual dashboards and habit analytics
- Goal types like "reach a target" or "maintain an average" (numerical goals)
- iOS-native experience with widgets and health integrations
- Gamified streaks and scoring systems
Side-by-side comparison
| Dimension | Strides | Buffy |
|---|---|---|
| Core model | Analytics dashboard + streak tracking | Behavior engine with memory and adaptation |
| Goal types | Habit, Quit, Target, Average | Habit, Task, Routine |
| Platform | iOS / iPadOS only | Telegram, Slack, ChatGPT, OpenClaw |
| Reminders | iOS push notifications | Conversational nudges across channels |
| Behavioral memory | None | Short-term + episodic + semantic history |
| Adaptation | None | Reminder timing and tone adapt to patterns |
| Analytics | Rich charts, scores, trend lines | Pattern summaries via conversational briefing |
| Team features | None | Slack routines, shared activity sets |
| Numerical goal tracking | ✅ Built-in | ✗ Not supported |
| Multi-step routines | ✗ | ✅ |
| Tasks / projects | ✗ | ✅ |
| Best for | Analytics-driven habit review, iOS-native | Cross-channel execution and follow-through |
Where Strides genuinely wins
- You want rich, visual habit analytics on iOS — Strides' dashboards are excellent
- You track numerical targets (steps, sleep hours, water intake) alongside binary habits
- You prefer a dedicated, purpose-built app over a behavior agent
- You do deep habit reviews and want trend data to inform your decisions
- iOS is your primary platform and iOS notifications work well for you
Where Buffy wins
- Your failure mode is forgetting to open the habit app, not forgetting the habit itself
- You want reminders to arrive in Telegram or Slack, where you already spend your day
- Your habit system needs to handle tasks and routines, not just recurring check-ins
- You want reminders that adapt — different timing on heavy meeting days vs. light ones
- You're coordinating habits or routines with a team
The "open the app" problem
Strides' biggest limitation isn't a feature gap — it's a behavioral one. It's a dedicated app you have to open, remember to check, and engage with on its terms. For people who naturally build an "open Strides" habit, this works. For people who get busy and forget to open it for three days, the system quietly collapses.
Buffy solves this differently: it comes to you. A Telegram message at 8am. A Slack nudge when your deep work block ends. You don't open Buffy — Buffy shows up where you already are.
This is the core tradeoff. Strides gives you a better view of your habit data. Buffy gives you less friction in actually doing the habits.
Using both
The natural combination if you want both:
- Strides for weekly habit reviews, analytics, and numerical goal tracking on iOS
- Buffy for day-to-day reminders and follow-through across Telegram, Slack, and ChatGPT
Strides handles the measurement layer. Buffy handles the execution layer.