5/5 rating based on 131 reviews. Read all reviews for The Fourth Dimension for iPhone.
The Fourth Dimension is paid iOS app published by Drew Olbrich
Booooooones
This was a new and unique experience that had me thinking about it days after viewing it. I highly anticipate the author's next release!
MajorScope
Great journey great work in the app careful attention to detail. But $2.99 for something I could have watched on YouTube in 5 minutes? Seriously should be a .99 job at best instead of a money grab.
Natedg89
Overall an amazing eye opening app, but I have a 4 star review for the $2 price, because it is a one time use app that can be finished in 10 minutes
gamer_boy63
This app does a significant job at explaining the fourth dimension. I had a little understanding of it, then I installed this app and know it completely. The one negative I have is the content:price ratio. There is only about 10-15 minutes worry of content, while the price is $3. Other than the price, I definitely recommend this app.
DrBacon
This app is excellent for any one wanting to understand the 4th dimension, I will definitely buy their next app when it's out ?.
Shadow Dragon 717
I've read stuff on Wikipedia and other sources on wacky 4-D stuff and understood the concept of a tesseract, but I still bought the app so I could spin one around. literally one of the best decisions I've ever made. it is super cool how the developers put this together to allow for rotating. HIGHLY recommend this app. 3 bucks is a bargain for this
SJE4386
I am both an iOS developer and a mathematician and I have never seen such an elegant way of demonstrating higher dimensions in such a beautiful way. This is Flatland reborn. Great job guys.
jearley
I really love the concepts of the fourth spatial dimension, and I think this app does a great job of explaining it in an interactive and fun way. However, for the price point they're asking, I think the experience was rather short compared to other apps. I would suggest that either expand The app or lower the price to $.99.
Michael Pass
This is an absolutely excellent hands-on demonstration of the first concepts in imagining higher-dimension geometry. A must have for anyone who's just read Flatland or its derivative works.