You already know the answer — Reveal Day turns it into a countdown, a share-ready reveal card and a full-screen party moment.
Coming soon to theApp Store
Reveal Day is a gender-reveal celebration toolkit for the expecting parent — or the friend hosting the party — who already knows the answer from the ultrasound. It bundles the whole arc of the event: a live countdown to the party date, a reveal card maker, and a full-screen tap-to-reveal animation for the moment itself.
The card maker offers templates — balloons, cake, smoke cannon, "he or she" — with the baby name and date, and exports a pixel-perfect image or print-ready PDF. What you design is exactly what every guest receives, whether it goes out by iMessage, an Instagram story, or as a printed cake topper or invite.
Reveal Day makes no predictions and performs no scans — the parents bring the real answer, and the app celebrates it. Everything renders on your device, offline, instantly.
Set the party date and get a live countdown with a confetti tease — including a Lock Screen countdown so the excitement lives outside the app.
Balloon, cake, smoke-cannon and "he or she" templates with baby name and date, in soft hand-painted watercolor style.
A full-screen balloon-pop, confetti-cannon or color-flood moment for the party itself, on a phone or mirrored to a TV.
Cards are rendered to a fixed image on your device, so the reveal looks the same on every phone that receives it.
Save-to-Photos, iMessage and story-sized shares, plus print-ready PDFs for cake toppers, invites and save-the-dates.
No server, no processing wait, no account. Everything renders on the device the moment you tap.
Enter the party date and let the countdown — with its confetti tease — build the anticipation.
Pick a template, set boy or girl, add the name and date. The answer stays hidden until you choose to share.
Export the card as an image for messages and stories, or a print-ready PDF for the cake topper and invites.
At the party, hand over the phone or mirror it to the TV and let someone tap the reveal.
The simplest way is a tap-to-reveal animation: guests watch the screen — or a TV the phone is mirrored to — and one tap floods it with the answer in confetti and color. Reveal Day includes balloon-pop, confetti-cannon and color-flood animations rendered live on the device, so there is no buffering or processing wait at the big moment.
It is a small celebration where expecting parents share whether they are having a boy or a girl, often via a staged surprise like a balloon pop or a colored cake cut. Sometimes a friend or relative hosts so the parents can be surprised too. Reveal Day covers either setup — whoever knows the answer builds the reveal, and everyone else just watches.
No. Apps that claim to predict a baby's sex from photos, scans or dates have no medical basis — the reliable answer comes from your ultrasound or a blood test, through your clinician. Reveal Day deliberately makes no prediction: you bring the real answer, and the app's job is only to celebrate it well.
Pick a design that hides the answer until the right moment, add the baby name and date, and send it as an image everyone's phone displays the same way. Reveal Day bakes each card into a fixed image on your device, so the card that reaches grandma is pixel-for-pixel the card you designed — a common failure of web-based reveal links.
Keep it simple: the parents' names, the date, time and place, and a playful line like "He or she? Come and see!" — without hinting at the answer. Reveal Day's card maker doubles as an invitation and save-the-date maker, with print-ready PDF export so paper invites match the digital ones.
Most parents learn the sex at the 18–22 week anatomy ultrasound; some know earlier from NIPT blood test results, around week 10 or later. That leaves weeks between knowing and celebrating. Reveal Day's countdown is built for exactly that gap — set the party date and let the anticipation build on your Lock Screen.
Remote reveals work best as a shared moment plus a keepsake: schedule a video call for the live reaction, then send everyone the reveal card. Because Reveal Day exports fixed images and PDFs, distant relatives get exactly the same card at the same time, and the tap-to-reveal animation can play on camera during the call.
Reveal Day includes a live countdown to your party date with a confetti tease, and it can live on your Lock Screen so you see the days tick down without opening the app. The countdown deliberately never shows the answer — fish, bubbles and balloons stay evenly blue-and-coral until the reveal itself.
The classic risks are a visible ultrasound envelope, a spoiled shopping cart, and apps or links that show the answer on the setup screen. Reveal Day keeps the answer out of sight in day-to-day use: the countdown and teaser elements are always neutral, and the reveal itself only plays when someone deliberately taps it.
Yes — cake toppers, banners and invites are usually printed from a PDF at home or at a print shop. Reveal Day exports print-ready PDFs of its card designs, sized cleanly for printing, so the paper decorations match the digital reveal in style and color.
Reveal Day does. All templates, countdowns, animations and exports render on the device with no server involved, so a spotty backyard or venue connection cannot stall the moment. Apps that process the reveal in the cloud can leave a party staring at a spinner — that failure mode simply does not exist here.
High-contrast, single-moment reveals photograph best: a balloon pop with colored confetti, a smoke-cannon color burst, or a screen flooding with color that lights up faces in the dark. Reveal Day's full-screen animations are designed for the camera — one decisive tap, one clear color, no ambiguity in the pictures afterward.
The countdown, the card and the moment — one calm little toolkit for the big day.
Coming soon to theApp Store