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Crashguard is a crash capture and exception tracking tool for mobile apps. By adding an SDK dependency to the app and registering an exception handler, it reports stack traces, runtime environment details, pre-crash user steps, network request logs, and other information when a crash occurs. It also links errors to app versions, helping developers determine whether an issue appeared or disappeared after a specific deployment.
Based on the available text, Crashguard focuses on real-time crash detection, real-time metrics monitoring, and low-impact integration. It emphasizes low memory usage, reduced battery and network consumption, and “silent” exception handling that does not disrupt the user experience. On the diagnostics side, it provides full stack traces, device/runtime environment details, network request logs, deployment monitoring, and custom result organization. Team plans and above also include custom alerts and third-party integrations; Business supports team management; and the Enterprise plan can offer custom error views, retention policies, and dashboards.
The pricing page lists a free Developer plan, Team at $15/month, Business at $45/month, and Enterprise via sales contact, with all plans offering a 30-day free trial and unlimited errors. This pricing is attractive for small teams. However, the FAQ also says the product is currently contribution-ware, free to use, and accepts contributions, with possible future charges for advanced features—this is inconsistent with the pricing page. In addition, features such as email/SMS notifications, AI debugging, ANR detection, debug logs, and memory snapshots at crash time are marked as “in development,” indicating that some capabilities are not yet available.
The main advantage is a clear onboarding path: SDK integration, real-time reporting, and a unified dashboard, making it useful for reducing the time needed to diagnose production issues. The free plan supports unlimited errors, which is friendly to independent developers. The downside is limited public information: it does not specify supported languages, SDK package names, Android/iOS version ranges, APIs, documentation examples, data regions, SLA, or compliance certifications. The supported third-party integrations are also not listed. Its open-source status is unclear: although it mentions accepting code contributions, no license or repository information is provided.
Crashguard is suitable for individual mobile app developers, small teams, and teams that want a low-cost crash dashboard. Enterprises that require a mature ecosystem, compliance audits, self-hosting, or stable network access from mainland China should verify these aspects further. The text does not provide information about access from China, nor does it specify payment methods. Teams in China may also want to evaluate alternatives such as Sentry, Firebase Crashlytics, Bugsnag, Instabug, or Rollbar.
⚠ 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 crashguard.me official site.
crashguard.me is an Unknown Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $15.00, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach crashguard.me directly.