Real people. Real moments.
No demonstrations. No best-case scenarios. Just what happened.
Raymond
68 · Marseille · Gout and GERD
Raymond has gout and GERD. He hasn't traveled in two years. He almost deleted Compass after the first week.
He doesn't travel. He doesn't need an emergency card. He wasn't sure what the fox was watching for.
Then day 3 of a flare. He tapped Joints.
SECOND SENSE
Your joints are reporting. No travel disruption detected. This may be diet, activity, or a pattern worth tracking. The fox is watching.
— Zkomi
He tapped Stomach the next morning. The fox noted both. Said nothing else.
Three weeks later, after six more entries, the fox surfaced something quiet.
SECOND SENSE
Your joint and stomach signals tend to arrive together. The fox noticed before you did.
— Zkomi
His doctor had told him gout and GERD were separate conditions. Raymond had always suspected they weren't. He never had the data to say so. Now he does.
The fox doesn't travel. It witnesses. Wherever you are.
Patrick
75 · Paris · Cardiac medication
Patrick takes three medications. One for his heart. He travels twice a year — London for his grandchildren, Amsterdam for his cardiologist.
Before Compass, he spent two days before every trip printing letters, translating medication names, finding clinic addresses.
Before his last Amsterdam trip, he opened Compass.
COMPASS TAB
Destination: Amsterdam. Cardiologist finder. Three options. Prices listed before he walked in.
— Zkomi
At the airport, customs asked about his medications. Border Mode. One tap. His name. His beta blocker declared. His heart condition: invisible. He walked through.
In Amsterdam, his regular cardiologist was unavailable. He opened Compass. Found a clinic three streets away. Knew the price before he arrived.
He doesn't use the emergency card for emergencies. He uses it because it means he never has to explain his medications to a stranger in a language he doesn't speak.
€29. Once. Forever. He paid it the same day his daughter showed him the app.
Katya
34 · London · BPC-157 protocol
Katya has been running a BPC-157 protocol for six months for a shoulder injury that wouldn't heal. She travels frequently. The protocol travels with her — or tries to.
The last time she flew to Dubai, her vials had been in a warm bag for four hours. She didn't know if they were still viable. She guessed. She injected anyway.
This time she opened Compass before the flight.
STORAGE CHECK
Cold chain integrity uncertain after 4+ hours above 8°C. Consider this vial compromised.
— Zkomi
At Dubai customs, she opened the Customs Script. Three sentences, in Arabic, explaining her medical device status. She showed the screen. No questions asked.
The fox didn't save her shoulder. But it saved her protocol. This is what Compass is for — the gap between the clinic that prescribed it and the country you're in when you need it.
Lucy and Jim
Edinburgh · Family plan · Three daughters
Lucy and Jim travel every school holiday. Three daughters: 4, 7, and 11. The 7-year-old has a penicillin allergy. The 11-year-old takes a daily medication for ADHD — controlled in several countries.
They used to travel with a folder of letters, allergy cards, and prescription printouts that inevitably got left in the hotel room.
One subscription. Five profiles. Every emergency card translated. Every allergy visible to the first responder who needs it.
Last summer in Thailand, the 4-year-old had a reaction at the beach.
SOS
Nearest clinic: 2 minutes away. Emergency card showing penicillin allergy — in Thai. Before the clinic staff asked a single question — they knew.
— Zkomi
Everyone safe. One fox watching.
$24.99 a month. Less than one pharmacy visit. For every trip. For every member. For every moment.
Nicolas
31 · Geneva · Fit. No medications.
Nicolas runs four times a week. He sleeps well. No medications. No conditions. No allergies worth mentioning. He downloaded Compass because a friend mentioned it. He wasn't sure why he needed it. He almost didn't bother.
He tapped how he felt every morning. Sometimes logged a run. Sometimes fatigue. He didn't think anything of it.
Ninety days later the fox surfaced something.
AHA SCORE · DAY 90
Your energy logs drop consistently in the 48 hours before long-haul flights. Your sleep breaks the night of arrival. This pattern has appeared on every trip in the last three months. The fox noticed before you did.
— Zkomi
He had always assumed he was just bad at traveling. A bit anxious. Not a good sleeper away from home. It wasn't anxiety. It was a pattern. Biological. Predictable. Manageable.
His next trip he knew what was coming. He adjusted his sleep anchor two days before departure. Day 2 was still hard. But he knew it would be. And he knew it would lift.
The fox doesn't wait for something to go wrong. It reads what's already there.
After 90 days, the fox knows you. Nicolas didn't think he needed that. He was wrong.
THE BIOLOGY
Your body doesn't land
when the plane does.
London to Tokyo is nine hours of clock time. Your biology needs five days.
Compass tracks both simultaneously. Not the timezone on your phone — the clock inside your body, adapting at 1.0 hours per day eastbound, 1.5 hours westbound.
Your medication timing adjusts to where your biology actually is. Not when the timezone changes. When your body does.
This is not jet lag advice. This is chronopharmacology made personal.
— Zkomi
AHA SCORE
After 7 days, the fox knows your rhythm.
After 30 days, the fox knows your pattern.
After 90 days, the fox knows you.
Cancel and it starts over.
The AHA Score is not a number. It is a relationship — built from every symptom tapped, every dose confirmed, every journey logged.
Underneath the score is a three-layer pattern correlation — biological, temporal, behavioural — running entirely on your device.
No population comparison. No generalised model. The fox compares you to yourself.
On device only. Yours alone. No server holds your pattern.
— Zkomi
BUILT BY
A team working at the intersection of health intelligence, privacy architecture, and zero-knowledge infrastructure.
Our work draws on expertise across circadian biology, enterprise cybersecurity, longevity sector investment, strategic health consulting, and twelve years at the intersection of health, technology, and investment at Davos/WEF.
Advised by researchers, pharmacologists, and privacy architects across Europe, Southeast Asia, and North America.
Currently in early conversations with investors. Open to introductions.
→ hello@zkomi.com