Reach Student Life Management
Touchline Connect Pty Ltd
1.4 ★
215 ratings
Free
With this student life management app, you can submit leave requests, sign in or out, and manage emergencies. Includes attendance tracking, communication tools, and survey completion features.
AppRecs review analysis
AppRecs rating 1.4. Trustworthiness 72 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 26 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.
★☆☆☆☆
1.4
AppRecs Rating
Ratings breakdown
5 star
8%
4 star
1%
3 star
1%
2 star
1%
1 star
89%
What to know
✓
Low review manipulation risk
26% review manipulation risk
⚠
Mixed user feedback
Average 1.4★ rating suggests room for improvement
⚠
High negative review ratio
90% of sampled ratings are 1–2 stars
About Reach Student Life Management
Reach Student Life Management Screenshots
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Reviews for Reach Student Life Management
minecraftlover0908
Battery vampire
My phone was at 100%. I opened Reach. My phone exploded. Okay, maybe it didn't explode, but it did drop to 2% and became hot enough to forge a mythical sword. I think the app is actually using my phone's processor to mine the sadness of boarding school students. If you enjoy being tracked like a migratory bird by an app that has the stability of a Jenga tower in an earthquake, then Reach is for you. For everyone else, just use a carrier pigeon. It’s faster and has better customer support.
furrybiter27
DONT INSTALL THIS
Here’s a clear, concise plot summary of the Smiling Friends episode “Mole Man”: --- Plot Summary of Smiling Friends – Season 3, Episode 3: “Mole Man” In this episode, Pim and Charlie are kidnapped by an obsessive underground fan who lives beneath the surface and calls himself the Mole Man. While they try to escape his bizarre subterranean lair, the rest of the Smiling Friends team has to keep things running without them. Allan and Glep step up, taking on a job to help a stressed single mother by watching her kids, which leads to its own chaotic adventure. Meanwhile, Mr. Boss accidentally traps himself in an endless dance loop, adding another layer of absurdity to the episode. tvtropes.org