

In essence, Rocketbook notebooks work just like regular paper notebooks. I also got the Everyday Planner, a spiral-bound 6 by 9-inch book with a bunch of different pages inside including a calendar, monthly planner, weekly view, checklists and extra pages with different lines and dots. This note concept is also available in a larger 8.5x 11 inch size too. The note pages tack to the board magnetically. In my review, I got the Orbit Smart Notebook, a 6×9-inch flip-style notepad with an available hard clipboard style back. These notebooks are also not microwavable, though Rocketbook does also make the Wavo line that does clean via microwaving.

Worth noting, you can use the FriXion pen on other paper but you absolutely can’t use other pens on the Rocketbook paper… that is, if you ever want to clean them. With Orbit, the ink will wipe off using water and a soft cloth, which is included with your notebooks. These are from its Orbit line, which means you’ll write on them with the ink-loaded Pilot FriXion pen, which will also write on regular paper too. Rocketbook makes a variety of different note taking, organization, and productivity products. Special FriXion Pen works on other paper too: washable ink Okay… so what is Rocketbook? Rocketbook is, in a nutshell a notebook that’s fully reusable and it also uploads your every scribble to the cloud for storage, if you want. It’s kind of a strange and foreign concept, so in this review, I’ll look at exactly how it works, and if the books live up to their promises. When you’re out of paper you just literally wipe the notebook clean and use it over again. Rocketbook is a reusable writing system that lets you use your own handwriting on a paper-like sheet, then upload and archive, file, and organize your notes in the cloud.

What is Rocketbook and why would you want it?
