4th Dimension
Versions
Chart History
Time Machine ›Ratings Over Time
| Date | Version | Rating | Ratings | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 1, 2015 | 1.4 | ★ 4.6 | 43 | $2.99 |
| Dec 18, 2017 | 1.8.2 | ★ 4.8 | 211 | $2.99 |
| Dec 11, 2023 | 1.14 | ★ 4.8 | 1,835 | $2.99 |
From archived App Store listing data, captured by the Wayback Machine.
Archived Reviews
8 of 15Ok, I realize this will probably be the strangest review you’ve ever received. For years I’ve been filming objects that we don’t yet understand - those UAPs the Navy pilots filmed and other anomalies. I filmed an object that was changing shape in unpredictable ways, that is until I got this app! Now I have a much better understanding of how a 4th or other-dimensional object might behave at the boundary with our 3rd dimension world. This is the best explanation I’ve come across and is well worth the money!
How do you peel off its volumes the same way one would the surface area of a regular 3-space cube?
This is a Masterpiece period. Let me explain why. <br/><br/>First… I’m an idiot, so with that out of the way. Let me explain how this is perfect for the idiot. <br/><br/>This elegantly put together app, mixes interaction with text in a non cluttered way. A wonderful neat small package where the text & graphics “are not fighting” for screen real estate…<br/><br/>and because of this master design from their design team, we the user benefit from:<br/><br/>• easy to interact with UI<br/>• instant retention of knowledge presented<br/>• smooth user experience = UX meaning click this, to do that<br/>• mini sentence structure, means instant processing of knowledge<br/><br/>This brilliant & sympathetic design team of this app… MADE SURE, <br/><br/>there are no more than four sentences on the screen at any given time. (using iPad Pro 12.9) <br/><br/>so basically small bite size “super digestible” chunks, not a wall of text assaulting your visuals. All graphics are interactive, you can rotate.. etc. <br/><br/>I hope this studio makes more of these higher topics or even basic physics topics presented in this same style. I WILL BUY EVERYTHING this studio puts out, if this bar they set in quality, remains the same.<br/><br/>This studio has just become one of my favorite studios. <br/><br/>For any ux and ui designers or sci fi story writers, or sci fi game designers. You need to buy this.<br/><br/>For the story writers the concepts are as perfect as we can get to demonstrating such complex material.<br/><br/>For UI & UX designers… this app is a MASTERCLASS in design. Study it!<br/><br/>Everyone else, stop reading and go buy already!<br/><br/>DEVS & DESIGN TEAM:<br/>Please.. give me more. I have money for you.
So cool 😎
I played through the interactive scenes in this app years ago and found the 2D -> 3D -> 4D rotation analogies really helped to give an intuitive sense for the shape of a tesseract. The attention to detail and production values are quite high, and I was very happy to find that it still works perfectly in 2025.<br/><br/>I’d love to see more from this developer!
If you are sensitive to rapidly flashing lights do not watch the introduction. I’m surprised that a group of intelligent people built in a rapidly pulsing flashing light when it’s clear that’s a danger to people with types of epilepsy!
I love this app so much. I may not use it every day, but I do use it often. It is so hard (potentially impossible even) to contemplate what a 4 dimensional object is and how it behaves. This app has been a godsend to me because it never fails to stimulate my brain in both curiosity and fascination. Highly recommend, and don’t just go through the process once. Repeat it, and marvel in it, and then after some time has passed repeat the process, and after a few times you will be blown away when you start to grasp the impossible. Thank you Devs!!!
Now I understand why Dali painted the hypercube the way he did. I had a poster print of that painting on my wall 45 years ago, but wound up studying language instead of math. I’m still a math geek in my spare time, but for some reason I’d never gotten around to trying to manipulate a hypercube in 3 dimensions. <br/><br/>I would say my education is complete, but it never will be, of course. But thanks for filling in this part—I’ll be seeing how many odd 3-D shadows I can make from this. And wondering about representing five dimensions in three. Since, after all, this 3-D tesseract is only really projected onto my 2-D iPad screen, so both the third and fourth dimensions are illusions of perspective.
Period reviews recovered from Apple's customer-review feeds via the Wayback Machine.