Built for people who hate tracking food
Honest truth: most nutrition apps make you feel bad. You log a meal, get a red bar telling you you've gone over your calories, and close the app feeling guilty. After a few days you stop opening it entirely.
We built NutriQuest because we believed there was a better way. Not a way that lectures you about food, but one that rewards you for paying attention to it.
The idea
Duolingo proved something important: if you make a habit feel like a game, people actually build it. A streak turns into something you don't want to break. XP makes progress feel visible. Leagues make you want to compete. None of that changes what you're learning — it just makes you care about showing up.
We asked a simple question: what if nutrition tracking worked the same way? What if scanning your meals earned you something? What if your consistent choices made your hero look stronger? What if missing a day actually felt like something you wanted to recover from, not just a reason to quit entirely?
That's NutriQuest. Same nutrition data. Completely different relationship with it.
What we believe
Where we are
NutriQuest is currently in final testing ahead of our iOS and Android launch. We're a small, independent team and we've built every feature ourselves — from the AI food scanner to the league system to the gem economy.
We're not backed by a big company. We don't have a marketing budget. We're launching because we built something we genuinely believe in, and we want to put it in front of people who've given up on nutrition apps before.
If that sounds like you — join the waitlist. We'll let you know the moment we're live.
Get in touch
Questions, feedback, press enquiries, or just want to say hello — we read everything.
hello@nutriquest.io