Booster+
Evidence-based exercises for men's sexual health — pelvic floor training, breath work, and stress reduction. Ad-free, privacy-first, no account.
Coming soon to Google Play
What it is
Booster+ is an Android app for men interested in improving erectile function, ejaculatory control, and post-prostatectomy recovery through daily exercise practice. Every exercise in the app is grounded in peer-reviewed clinical research, with the citations included in-app so you can read the source studies yourself.
The app guides you through short daily sessions — most are 1 to 5 minutes — and tracks your adherence over time. No subscriptions, no in-app purchases, no ads, no analytics, no account required.
What's inside
- Pelvic floor training (Kegel track)Three positions × twice a day. Based on the Dorey 2004 RCT and the Milios 2020 high-intensity protocol.
- Pelvic floor release (DownTrain track)Daily diaphragmatic breathing plus a paradoxical-relaxation body scan, for men whose pelvic floor is overactive rather than weak.
- MindfulnessConfigurable 2–20 minute breath-awareness sessions with periodic return cues. Useful adjunct for performance anxiety.
- Jacobson PMRTwo-minute progressive muscle relaxation using the Bernstein-Borkovec abbreviated 4-group protocol.
- Streaks and adherence trackingPer-track streaks anchored to research milestones — 80% adherence threshold, multi-tier goals, forgiving reset rules.
- Research libraryThe full source research markdown ships inside the app. Read the studies, see the limitations, decide for yourself.
- Honest framingThe app does not claim to cure ED or PE. It offers evidence-based daily practice; medical evaluation is recommended.
Privacy
Booster+ collects nothing. There are no network requests, no analytics, no third-party SDKs, no account. All exercise history and settings live in local device storage and disappear when you uninstall.
Read the full privacy policy →
Not medical advice. Booster+ is an educational tool. It is not a diagnostic device and is not a substitute for evaluation by a qualified clinician. If you have persistent erectile or ejaculatory difficulty, pelvic pain, or post-prostatectomy concerns, see a doctor or a pelvic-health physiotherapist.