Weather apps are usually one of the most boring things on your phone. You open one, glance at the temperature, maybe check if it is going to rain, and close it without a second thought. SkyDex tries to fix that by turning the whole thing into a Pokémon-style collecting game. And honestly, I can see the appeal.
After trying out the free version on an iPhone 15, i came away thinking it is genuinely fun wrapped in an app that still feels a little rough around the edges. It is a weather app with a layer of Pokémon experience, which has you fill out a Kanto-style Pokédex while still getting your usual weather info.
How SkyDex works
SkyDex is still primarily a weather app. You get the usual stuff like temperature, hourly forecasts, 10-day forecasts, humidity, wind, precipitation chances, and more. The twist is that changing conditions can trigger different Pokémon encounters, which then get added to your in-app Dex.
The app can drop different Pokémon based on weather, temperature shifts, time of day, and location changes, with rarity levels ranging from common to legendary. The free version also keeps the core experience intact, only limiting saved locations and adding ads.
The fun bit is that it makes a boring utility app feel alive
This is the best part of my time with it. SkyDex made checking the weather feel more interactive than it has any right to. Rather than opening an app and seeing a forecast, I found myself curious about what weather conditions might unlock something new. That little Pokémon hook does exactly what it is supposed to do: it turns routine into a small game.

And that matters more than it sounds. A weather app is not supposed to be exciting, but SkyDex makes it feel like there is at least a tiny reward for opening it again.
But it’s still a little undercooked
The catch is that the app does not feel polished enough yet. The free version is absolutely usable, but you have to deal with ads. This is something I can live with but what bothered me more was the UI. In portrait mode, some text and images felt cut off or poorly sized, while landscape orientation looked much better and more stable.

That doesn’t kill the app’s charm, but it does stop it from feeling as slick as the concept deserves. SkyDex is fun, and I can see why people are into it. Though it does need a cleaner interface before it becomes the kind of weather app I would recommend without hesitation.






