Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
komichi is a tool for planning days off and outings, with the core pitch of “Create a plan for your day off.” Based on a user’s preferences and goals, it automatically searches for tourist attractions, cafés, and other places to visit, then turns them into an outing plan. It is best understood as a lightweight itinerary-planning and place-recommendation tool focused on answering: “Where should I go, and how should I spend the day?”
Based on the information available on the page, komichi mainly offers automatic discovery of outing spots that match user preferences, plus the ability to combine those places into a plan. Typical use cases include weekend city wandering, sightseeing route planning, café hopping, and last-minute day-off activity planning. The captured text does not disclose the specific AI model, map data sources, or recommendation logic, nor does it explain whether the product supports route optimization, time budgeting, transport modes, business-hours checks, or multi-person preference matching. As a result, its “AI capabilities” appear to be more about automated recommendations and plan generation; the depth of those capabilities cannot yet be confirmed.
The currently available public copy does not provide information about a free tier, trial, subscription pricing, or payment methods. It also does not state whether a Chinese interface or Chinese place-name input is supported. API access, third-party calendar integrations, map integrations, and navigation-app integrations are likewise not disclosed. For users in China, the existing text does not make it possible to judge access stability, registration availability, support for domestic payment methods, or coverage of local place data.
The main advantage is its clear positioning: it targets the frequent, lightweight need of planning an outing on a day off, reducing the time users spend switching between maps, review sites, and social platforms to compare options. If its recommendation quality is reliable, it could be useful for quickly generating one-day trip plans. The limitations are also obvious: the page provides very little information and lacks plan examples, regional coverage details, data sources, a privacy policy, pricing, and support-channel information. Travel-planning products also depend heavily on real-time business status, distance and travel time, venue popularity, and understanding user preferences—none of which can currently be verified.
komichi is suitable for individual users, couples, or small groups who do not want to spend too much time researching where to go, especially those looking to quickly plan weekend sightseeing, café visits, or short leisure outings. Its accessibility from China is unknown. If you need alternatives that work in China, you may consider Amap, Dianping, and Xiaohongshu for place discovery and route planning, or combine them with international tools such as Google Maps, Tripadvisor, and Wanderlog. Overall, komichi has a clear concept and appears easy to get started with, but more public information is needed regarding monetization, data reliability, and availability.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on komichi.app official site.
komichi.app is an Japan AI Apps provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach komichi.app directly.