Skip to main content

Popular app discovery tool AppGratis pulled from iOS App Store

appgratisIf you have an iDevice and are partial to a bit of App Store browsing during idle moments, you will’ve noticed that many of the apps that sit atop the chart make it there largely because they’re “free today with AppGratis”.

AppGratis, itself an app, highlights developers’ apps by offering one free app per day. With 10 million AppGratis users eager to download the daily recommendation, showcased apps quickly shoots to the top of the charts.

Recommended Videos

On Monday, however, Apple removed AppGratis from the App Store, which, considering it’s been available in the store for the last four months without any bother, has come as a surprise to many.

An Apple spokesperson told Cnet AppGratis had been pulled from the store for breaking two App Store rules:

2.25: Apps that display Apps other than your own for purchase or promotion in a manner similar to or confusing with the App Store will be rejected

5.6 Apps cannot use Push Notifications to send advertising, promotions, or direct marketing of any kind.

As Cnet points out, the removal comes a few months after a similar app, AppShopper, was also taken off the store by Apple, and six months after the Cupertino company closed down Chomp, an app discovery service it acquired in early 2012.

Of course, AppGratis’s removal doesn’t mean it’s going to stop doing what it does, at least for the time being. It is, after all, still present on some 10 million devices, meaning that for the foreseeable future, we’ll still be seeing plenty of apps at number one because it’s “free today with app AppGratis”.

With nearly a million apps on Apple’s App Store, developers are finding it increasingly difficult to get their apps discovered. By highlighting a different app each day, and offering it for free, AppGratis offers another way for developers to boost downloads of their app.

Other apps that have been removed from the App Store in the past have managed to get back in the store after implementing design changes following talks with Apple, so it’s likely the folks at AppGratis will take a similar approach in an effort to return.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Things still aren’t looking good for Apple’s iOS 19 update
iPhone 16 Pro Max in Desert Titanium.

The latest version of iOS 18.2 rolled out to (most) iPhone users yesterday, and it brought with it a slew of new features that fans have eagerly waited for. These include Visual Intelligence for iPhone 16, Genmoji, and Image Playground. However, this slower rollout of iOS 18 features is having an impact on development times for its next iteration, and that means iOS 19 might be delayed.

There have been whispers of delays before, so this doesn't come as a huge surprise — particularly when you think about how the production flow at Apple usually goes. In a Threads post, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said: "I continue to hear that the gradual rollout of features across iOS 18 to iOS 18.4 is leading to delays of some features scheduled for iOS 19. That will lead to a long-term rollout of features next cycle as well. Engineers are stuck working on iOS 18 projects when they’d usually already be on to the following OS."

Read more
RCS messaging is now live in iOS 18.2 for Boost Mobile subscribers
RCS messaging on iOS 18.

This week, Apple released iOS 18.2. Though the update is mostly being advertised for its new Apple Intelligence features, it also includes another feature long promised for certain U.S. iPhone users.

With the iOS 18.2 update, Boost Mobile customers using iPhones can now use RCS (Rich Communication Services) as an alternative to SMS and MMS. A Reddit user (via Android Authority) was the first to discover the change. Apple teased RCS support last year before making an official announcement at this year's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June.

Read more
The iOS 18.2 update includes a special feature just for iPhone 16 Pro users
A person holding the Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max.

If you have an iPhone 16 Pro or iPhone 16 Pro Max, updated to iOS 18.2, and regularly use the Voice Memos app, then your phone just got even better if you're a musician. Originally teased in September’s iPhone 16 event, Layered Recordings is now available in the Voice Memos app with the iOS 18.2 update.

What exactly are Layered Recordings? Basically, you can now add a vocal track layer on top of any existing instrumental recording without the need for headphones. In the iOS 18.2 update, users are now able to play original instrument ideas through the iPhone’s built-in speakers while simultaneously recording vocals with the studio-quality microphone on the iPhone 16 Pro or Pro Max.

Read more