App to Track LEGO Minifigures
That shoebox full of mismatched LEGO torsos and heads isn't going to organize itself. You started with a few Star Wars sets, and now you have a plastic tub overflowing with hundreds of tiny, yellow-handed people from dozens of themes. You need a way to figure out what you have, what you're missing, and who that guy with the weird helmet is.
You need an app.
Spreadsheets are fine for tracking stocks, but they're a soulless way to manage a minifigure collection. The right app turns a chore into part of the hobby. It's about seeing your collection in a clean, visual grid, not squinting at rows in a CSV file. Good ones let you mark figures as owned with a single tap, track your duplicates, and add notes about their condition.
The Big Problem: Identification
The first thing an app needs to solve is identification. The best ones have a scanner. For the newer Collectible Minifigures (CMF) that come in blind boxes, apps like Minifig Scan or BrickSearch let you scan the QR-like code on the box to see who's inside before you buy. It completely changes the game. No more feeling up bags in the middle of a Target aisle.
My conversion happened at 4:17 PM on a Tuesday. I was trying to complete the Marvel Series 2 collection for my kid, and we kept getting duplicates of Agatha Harkness. We just needed Echo. I downloaded an app right there in the store, scanned the next six boxes, and found the one we were missing. My son thought I was a wizard. It was worth the weird looks from the guy stocking shelves in his 2011 Honda Civic.
For older or loose figures, things get more interesting. Some apps use your phone's camera to identify a figure or even a pile of parts from a photo. Apps like BrickScan are built for this, letting you take a picture and get a list of possible matches, complete with part numbers and the sets it originally came in.