1. No coincidence I'm sure.The paid version (a one-time payment of $8.50) adds very generic lists of "foods to eat", and "foods to avoid" & "foods high in purines", completely without differentiation (eg, are beans, spinach and mushrooms AS BAD as beer and organ meats? The app doesn't tell you.
2. AND, you still have to pay an extra $3:50 to get rid of ads!I want to start eating better, I paid £4.99 for the pro feature nothing ?! I emailed several times, nothing there is even a button that says I did not get my pro feature basically pay to unlock everything, this is a paid app disguised as a free app, but it does not work.
3. Do not download!!I bought the pro version and it's a waste one page of food you already knew, no search function nor use full information every thing seems like cut and paste from Wikipedia.
4. I paid £4.99 for info I can get for free I paid the money because I thought this app would stream line the learning curve, but I was wrong.
5. In the first menu I tapped on "foods to avoid" and it's a premium feature! Umm.
6. Of course there is a in app purchase because then you can't refundPay over $7 for this app just to have to pay more for pro version or advice or extras do not get this app do your research.This is to help people.
7. If you want to charge for a feature, it needs to be something I can't get elsewhere or something that's really smart.
8. There's a thing called Google that's free.
9. It's a very rough looking app but as long as the info is good, I thought I'd give it a try.
10. It doesn't seek to measure purines.
11. The only people who would pay are vulnerable older users.