an honest comparison

Prompts you answer, or a letter that answers you.

Stoic is a well-made guided journal: prompts, morning and evening routines, mood tracking. Ori takes the opposite bet — that on your hardest evenings you won't fill in a form, but you might say a few honest words. Here's the real difference.

The short version

Stoic structures your reflection for you: thought-provoking prompts, a morning preparation and an evening reflection, mood tracking, breathing exercises. You answer its questions. Ori doesn't ask questions — you say whatever's there, even one line, and each evening it writes you back a short letter drawn only from what you shared.

Where Stoic is genuinely strong

  • Structure, if you want it. Guided journals and routines give you somewhere to start every single day, morning and night.
  • Practices beyond writing. Breathing exercises, mood check-ins, and reflection exercises inspired by Stoic philosophy.
  • A free tier to try. Daily prompts and a selection of exercises are free, with a premium subscription unlocking the deeper features.

Where Ori is different by design

  • No prompts, no form to fill. Prompts still ask you to do the writing. Ori assumes the writing is the barrier — you talk, it writes the entry back.
  • No routine to keep. Stoic is built around a daily practice. Ori has no streaks and no morning/evening checklist — miss a week and nothing scolds you.
  • Your body in the picture. Ori can read your sleep and energy (Oura or Apple Health, optional) beside your words — the day you felt and the day you had, on one page.
  • Everything is free. No premium tier. The letter, the patterns, the voice input — all of it, for everyone.

The honest bottom line

If a structured daily practice with prompts and exercises keeps you grounded, Stoic does that well. If what you need is to be heard at the end of the day without homework — and to have the entry written for you — that's Ori. The philosophies genuinely differ: one guides you, the other witnesses you.

the real difference

Guided practice, or quiet witness.

You talk, it writes

No prompt to answer, no form to complete. A few honest lines — even "today was a lot" — and the evening letter takes it from there.

No practice to maintain

No streaks, no daily checklist, no guilt mechanics. Ori is simply there whenever you come back.

Free, with nothing behind a tier

Stoic reserves its deeper features for premium. Ori has no premium — everything it does is free.

ori vs stoic

The questions people actually ask.

Is Ori better than Stoic?
Not universally — they take opposite approaches. Stoic guides you with prompts, routines, and exercises you complete. Ori asks for nothing but a few lines and writes the entry back to you. Pick Stoic if structure keeps you going; pick Ori if the structure itself is what you keep abandoning.
Does Ori have journaling prompts like Stoic?
Not inside the app — Ori's whole idea is that you shouldn't need them: you say whatever's there and it writes back. If you like starting from a question, we do keep a free page of honest journaling prompts you can use anywhere.
Is Ori free like Stoic's free tier?
Ori is entirely free — there is no premium tier at all. Stoic offers daily prompts and some exercises free, with its deeper features behind a premium subscription.
Does Ori do mood tracking?
Not as a score you log. Ori reflects how your days actually read — your own words, and optionally your sleep and energy from a wearable — back to you in plain language. Nothing is rated and nothing is invented.
Can I use both Ori and Stoic?
Yes, and it's not a strange pairing: Stoic for a structured morning practice, Ori for the unstructured end of the day when you just need to say it to someone and be written back to.
Ori

No homework. Just say the day out loud.

A few words is enough — the letter comes back in the evening. Free, private, and it never leaves your phone.

Try Ori — free

Stay in the loop

An occasional, quiet note about Ori — new features, gently. No spam, and you can leave anytime.