Amazon / Medical / WO.AUDIO-HYPNOSIS
REVIEW
Wo.Audio-Hypnosis files itself under Medical and hopes nobody asks why.
A 99-cent self-hypnosis audio player on the Amazon Appstore, parked in a category it has no business being in, with no studies, no licensed practitioners, and no real disclosure of what's inside the recordings.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
Wo.Audio-Hypnosis
LOYOYO.CC
OUR SCORE
5.8
AMAZON
★ 5.0
PRICE
$0.99
The Amazon Appstore’s Medical category is a strange neighbourhood. Genuine clinical tools sit alongside symptom checkers, alongside relaxation audio, alongside this — a 99-cent self-hypnosis player from a developer most readers will never have heard of, with no studies cited, no practitioner named, and no clear lineage for the scripts being read.
That doesn’t make the app bad. It makes the category badge wrong.
What you’re actually buying is a small, offline, pleasantly voiced library of guided relaxation tracks for a Fire tablet. As that, at that price, it works. As a medical product, it does not exist.
The recordings are calming, the price is small, and the Medical category badge is the most ambitious thing about the whole product.
FEATURES
Wo.Audio-Hypnosis is a 99-cent app from a developer called loyoyo.cc that ships a small library of guided self-hypnosis and relaxation audio tracks for Amazon Fire tablets. The interface is a play screen with a track list, a basic transport bar, and a sleep timer. Tracks cover the standard self-help spread — stress relief, sleep induction, confidence, focus, weight management, smoking cessation — voiced over ambient backing.
There is no streaming and no account; the audio is bundled into the app. Background playback works on Fire OS, and the sleep timer fades the track out at the chosen interval. That is essentially the entire product.
The Appstore listing places it under "Medical." There are no cited studies, no named clinical hypnotherapist on the credits, no disclosures about who recorded the scripts, and no claims grounded in a specific evidence base. It is a relaxation audio app with a category badge it did not earn.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
At 99 cents one-time and no subscription, the price-to-content ratio is honest. The recordings themselves are pleasant — calm voice, low-key ambient pad, none of the breathless wellness-app aesthetic that defines newer competitors like Calm or Insight Timer. For listeners who already know guided audio relaxation helps them sleep and just want a small, cheap, offline player on a Fire tablet by the bed, the app delivers exactly that and nothing more.
Offline-by-default is a genuine advantage over the streaming-first incumbents, especially on a Fire tablet that may not be the household's primary connected device.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The Medical category placement is the obvious problem. Self-hypnosis audio is not a regulated medical intervention, and an app with no clinical sourcing, no practitioner credits, and no efficacy disclosure should not be sitting next to genuine health tools. Amazon's category gatekeeping is the root cause, but the developer chose to list there.
The content library is small and undated. There is no indication of when tracks were recorded, no transcripts, no chapter markers within longer sessions, and no way to tell whether the script is grounded in any recognisable hypnotherapy framework or written by someone with relevant training. Compared to Insight Timer's tens of thousands of free guided sessions from credentialed teachers, the catalogue is a thimble.
CONCLUSION
Buy it if you want a 99-cent offline relaxation player on a Fire tablet and you have no illusions about what you're getting. Skip it if you came to the Medical category looking for something a clinician would endorse. The recordings are fine; the framing is not.