Why “Best” Is a Trap

I’ve seen those lists. Garage Gym Reviews tested over 70 workout apps. Forbes tested 40. PCMag had another batch. Each one ends with a different number-one pick, a different “best for beginners,” a different price point. Nearly one in five smartphone users downloads a fitness app (Angosto et al., 2023, cited by GGR). But download is not the same as sticking with it. Most people abandon the app within weeks, often because it never fit their real situation.

That is the real problem. Without a framework, you are guessing. The app store shows star ratings and screenshots of people who look like they never missed a day. It does not tell you whether the app expects a barbell you do not own, or whether it rewards streaks when what you really need is someone to check your form.

Split composition: left side a person in a small home gym using a smartphone with dumbbells and a mat; right side a close-up of a workout app interface showing exercise logging. Geometric decision-path lines connect the two scenes.
Matching an app to your actual training environment matters more than its store rating.