How Flip Tracker works
A focused tracker for balisong practice — what you can do, what you're working on, and how often you put time in. Five minutes here and you're set.
1 — Browse the trick library
A curated catalog of balisong tricks across basic, twirl, fan, rollover, aerial, and flow. Each one has a reference video from creators like Big Flips, Squid Industries, Bali Tube, and more. Open any trick to watch the tutorial.
Open the library →2 — Mark what you can do
On a trick page, pick a status: Not started, Learning, Clean, or Mastered. The pill colors carry through the whole app so you can see progress at a glance. Add personal notes below if you want — cues, what felt off, what clicked.
Tag your first trick →3 — Log a session after you flip
Three quick steps: how long, what you worked on (multi-select), anything worth remembering. The dashboard tallies your minutes + tricks practiced over time.
Log a session →4 — String tricks into combos
Build named sequences of tricks for flow practice. Drag rows to reorder — same trick can appear twice if your combo loops. Useful for muscle-memory drills.
Make a combo →5 — Keep a flipping journal
Free-form notes — observations, drills you want to try, things you learned in a session that don't belong on a specific trick.
Write a note →Credit the creators
Every reference video belongs to its tutorial author. The Credits page lists every channel we link to with a direct link — go subscribe.
See credits →
Tip — be honest about your status
"Clean" means you can land it most attempts, calmly, in any rotation direction. "Mastered" means under pressure — fast, drunk-with-flow, in a combo. Don't inflate; the % mastered on your dashboard is more motivating when it's real.