The best free iPhone apps of 2021 (1/2)
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All on Wed Jun 30 12:15:04 2021
The best free iPhone apps of 2021
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Wed, 30 Jun 2021 10:59:54 +0000
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TechRadar wants you to have the best apps going so here's our regularly updated list of the top free iPhone apps around.
FULL STORY ======================================================================
We've rounded up the very best free iPhone apps you can download today, includingphoto and video editors, health apps,music players, and much more besides.
You've got an iPhone, and have ventured into the melee of Apple's App Store, which has well over a million apps. Great news! Many of them are free. Not so great news! You've got to sift through them to work out the very best. Fortunately, that's what we're here for, listing them here.
Our selection is sorted into handy categories, so whether you need a no-cost photo editor, translation app, sat-nav or anything else, you can just jump straight to the relevant category.
Click through to the following pages for each category, but first check out our free iPhone app of the last month below, and make sure you give this page a cheeky bookmark so you can keep up with our latest free iPhone app pick every month.
Want more choice? Check out our full guide to the best iPhone apps , which includes both free and paid options. Free iPhone app of the month (Image credit: Rakko Inc) Outputter for Twitter
Outputter for Twitter helps you to avoid falling down a Twitter rabbit hole when youve something to say, largely by shielding you from most of Twitter. Instead of your timeline, the app starts off as a blank tweet posting box, to which you can add text and images. Tap the Tweet button and your diminutive missive is sent without any threat of you getting distracted by anyone
elses.
Beyond basic broadcasting, the app makes a few concessions. You can browse your own tweets and delete ones you no longer care for. Mentions are accessible, and you can respond to those in-app. Its a pity theres no access to direct messages, nor any means to remove the ad banner for a small
payment. But as a brutally streamlined zero-distraction Twitter client, Outputter fits the bill. The best free iPhone video editors and animation
apps
These are our favorite free iPhone apps for quickly editing videos, GIFs and Live Photos, and for creating stop-motion animation. (Image credit: FiLMiC Inc) DoubleTake
DoubleTake transforms a single iPhone into a multi-cam studio by letting you capture footage from two of your devices cameras simultaneously. With a supported iPhone (XS/XR or newer), you can shoot two different focal lengths of the same subject, or use front and rear cameras to capture an event and your reaction to it.
By default, the app uses a picture-in-picture set-up called Discreet. This saves two separate videos, so you can later edit each one independently. But you can instead opt to burn the PiP shot into the main video, or use a 50/50 split-screen view thats saved as a single file.
There are limitations, most notably the app outputting to 1080p, presumably because two 4K streams at once would melt your iPhone. But for fun and
serious work alike, DoubleTake is well worth a download. (Image credit: Animo Apps Ltd) Plays: animation design kit
Plays claims it can elevate your self-expression and make your content beautiful. In reality, its a free iPhone app that lets you type in a tiny missive (140 characters or fewer, like old-school Twitter), and then hurl the letters about the place.
This isnt freeform animation you dont need to know anything about keyframes and paths. Instead, you select a font, an animation style, a background pattern (which also animates), and an image to sit underneath everything. By default, you get an Instagram-friendly square composition, but a button lets you cycle through a range of alternatives.
Quite a few of the animation styles result in questionable legibility. But work with some of the subtler options and the rather nice backgrounds and you can end up with a visually arresting video to share online. (Image
credit: Future) Splice
Splice sits in a space between traditional movie-making software and quick-fix video editors.
As with products geared towards quickly fashioning something for social networking, Splice is keen to get you started. Select some videos or stills from your iPhone, drag to arrange the thumbnails, select an aspect ratio, and you essentially have an edit.
However, the app gives you plenty of options for taking things further. You can add titles, effects, text overlays, and audio. Individual clips can be trimmed, cropped, and have filters added to them. Naturally, in-progress projects are saved so you can return to them later.
Throughout, layout and workflow resemble the kind of thing youll be familiar with if youve ventured into desktop editing only streamlined for mobile, and without a price-tag attached. Enlight Pixaloop
Enlight Pixaloop enables you to animate your photos. This is achieved
through you manually drawing path arrows to define the direction of
animation, and setting anchors to keep other areas of your image rooted to
the spot. Tap the play button and you get something akin to a cinemagraph only based on a single still image, rather than dozens of shots or a video.
Whatever you create can be exported to Photos as a video (sadly, theres no animated GIF option), but theres plenty more you can add first, including camera wobble, overlay effects and automated moving skies. Some of those features work better than others, but the entire package is a great way to bring your photos to life. Note that theres subscription IAP lurking,
although you dont need to pay to get a lot out of this app. Moodelizer
Moodelizer is a one-trick pony but its quite a trick. It enables you to add custom soundtracks to videos and all you need is a single finger.
You select a genre, and rehearse playback by dragging your finger around the square viewfinder. Move up to increase the musics intensity increases and
move right to adjust variation. You can perform rehearsals using the viewfinder or with an existing video loaded from your Camera Roll.
Just messing about with the audio alone is fun, but it all properly comes together when making a video. Now, when youre shooting yet another clip of your cat being mildly amusing, Moodelizer can add much-needed excitement by way of rousing club music or head-banging guitar riffs. Vue
Vue is a video editor whose initial incarnation was an odd mix of intriguing and ridiculous. In short, it was designed to give you six seconds of fame by snapping an ultra-short video comprising three shots.
Fortunately, Vue is relaxed a bit now and all the better for it. The app still prefers brevity, but will allow movies of up to three minutes in length and can load existing videos from your iPhone, too. Once your miniature masterpiece is done, its possible to add filters and stickers, overlay subtitles, and mess around with zooming and adjustment sliders.
The app still feels a touch rigid compared to the likes of Clips, but Vues sense of focus and style along with the sharing network that underpins everything makes it worth checking out. Clips
Clips is a video-editing app geared towards making content for sharing on social media. To that end, it eschews convention (widescreen, standard
titles, typical editing tracks) and attempts to infuse plenty of fun into a streamlined, straightforward editing process.
You can record directly in the app or import existing videos. In either case, you can overlay stickers and live captions that appear as the subject speaks, and apply filters for a different look. Posters serve as a replacement for titles, helping with pacing and context in a way thats much more interesting, animated and editable.
For iPhone X users, theres an extra treat: animated 3D selfie scenes. These can transport you into a number of stylized landscapes, including neon cityscapes and ships from Star Wars. The effect is mesmerizing to the point where the apps worth picking up for selfie scenes alone. Motion Stills
Motion Stills aims to help you do more with the Live Photos you shoot on
your iPhone. Apples own Photos app, of course, provides options for adjusting how these images animate but this Google offering does far more.
On giving the app permission to view your photos, it will display a
scrollable feed of pictures that animate as you browse. This alone makes Motion Stills worth a download, not least because the app applies stabilization technology to your Live Photos, eradicating wobble.
But with a few quick swipes you can quickly select a number of Live Photos, which can then be transformed into a tiny movie. Alternatively, you can turn Live Photos into collages, or add text and emoji to your favorites. In short, Motion Stills feels like the Live Photos editor Apple forgot to make itself. Quik
If you like the idea of editing home movies but are a modern-day being with
no time or attention span, try Quik . The app automates the entire process, enabling you to create beautiful videos with a few taps and show off to your friends without needing talent - surely the epitome of today's #hashtag generation.
All you need do is select some videos and photos, and choose a style. Quik then edits them into a great-looking video you can share with friends and family. But if your inner filmmaker hankers for a little more control, you
can adjust the style, music, format and pace, along with trimming clips, reordering items, and adding titles to get the effect you desire.
Cementing its friendly nature, Quik offers a little pairs minigame for you to mess about with while the app renders your masterpiece. And there's even a weekly 'For You' video Quik compiles without you lifting a finger. See how a free VPN app can help keep your iPhone more secure The best free iPhone sketching and design apps
Our favorite free iPhone apps for drawing, sketching, painting, layout and animation. (Image credit: Appostrophe AB) Add Text: Write On Photos
Add Text: Write On Photos has a name that tells the whole story. Actually, thats not quite true most free apps where you slap text on images are packed full of IAP, or are plain dreadful. Add Text, though, is the real deal: a cruft/price-free app that makes it a cinch to add text to images.
Load a snap, and you can then switch between tabs to adjust font, color, alignment, perspective, and applied effects. Some of these offer a decent amount of fine-tuning, such as leading and kerning in alignment.
Theres the odd niggle the color picker is iffy, and dragging to adjust text orientation can be twitchy. But otherwise, Add Text is the sort of app that these days often comes with subscription IAP attached. So take advantage of this developers generosity, and get Add Text on your phone. (Image credit: Linearity GmbH) Vectornator X
Vectornator X provides all the tools you need to work up sleek vector-based illustrations, interface design layouts, and logos on your iPhone. Tools and panels get out of your way, maximizing the screen space afforded to your work
although if you have an iPhone Plus/Max, you can flip it into landscape to see the canvas and settings simultaneously .
Even if you arent a professional, Vectornator X is worth grabbing because it can act as a pseudo filter app, transforming a photo into vector art with
just a few taps
Load a picture, tap the up arrow to access the settings panel, and unlock
your photo in the Layers tab. Then select the Style (paintbrush) tab, tap the photo layer in the background, and select Auto Trace. Finally, swipe the
tools away and gaze at the work of art youve created in mere seconds. (Image credit: Cameraxis Private Limited / TechRadar) Desyne
Desyne is for creating flyers in a jiffy. You get a slew of templates, categorized into sections like posters and events, or aimed at specific
social networks. Select one and you can get to work.
This app has few limitations. Although you can make quick changes to a template for example, swapping out the background image, and a few words theres lots of scope for creativity. You can add stickers, text, and masks to your creations, working with a straightforward but smartly designed layers system.
Naturally, theres a catch: IAP. Without a subscription, templates and tools are limited, and a watermark is enforced. But even the free version of Desyne is fun, usable, and useful. If you like it, theres a big annual discount you can make use of during your first few hours with the app. Universe Website Builder
Universe Website Builder is as its name suggests a tool for building websites. The thought of doing this on your iPhone may make you feel queasy, but Universe works well, primarily because of the limitations it imposes.
Pages are essentially grids. You drag out a section and insert a content block. This might be an image, some text, a link, or a video. Once youre
done, your efforts are uploaded to the Universe website.
The app is usable, fun, and effective. With some effort, you can fashion surprisingly smart multiple-page sites; but also, with almost no effort, you can get something online. Of course, IAPs are lurking for
$9.99/8.99/AU$14.49 per month, you can add a domain, create a store, and view analytics. But even for free, this ones worth checking out. Autodesk SketchBook
Autodesk SketchBook is a drawing app for iPhone. Its of course far from
alone on the App Store, but what sets SketchBook apart is the sheer range of things you can do with the app.
Despite the minimal interface, theres tons to discover. There are dozens of brushes, which mimic all kinds of real-world tools. Every one of them can be tweaked. Multiple layers afford you flexibility when working on complex compositions. And transform, shape, and text tools provide scope when youre working on technically oriented illustrations rather than free-form doodling.
Youd usually expect to pay a fair amount for this kind of quality and once, SketchBook did have a price-tag attached. But now its free and yet still superb it would almost be an insult to not download it, even if you can barely scribble a stick-person. Paper
Paper is a sketching tool based around jotting down ideas quickly. Your drawings are stored in little digital notebooks, which you can open and flip through. Tap a page and you can scribble with a finger or stylus using the apps selection of brushes.
Theres a smattering of additional handy tools in the free version, most notably the ability to add text notes to any picture, and the means to export a note or book. However, some features sit behind monthly IAP, including
photo import, copy/paste, and auto-correct when drawing geometric shapes and lines.
Despite these limitations and the app rather oddly reorienting your sketches on iPhone when you return to browsing Paper remains one of the most pleasing apps of its kind, not least if you retain a fondness for real-life versions
of the little notepads the app depicts. Canva
Canva is a graphic design tool for the rest of us. Its not going to send professionals scurrying for the shadows, but with its mix of templates, filters, and editable design elements, it gives the average iPhone owner a fighting chance of working up an invite or poster during a lunch hour.
Layouts are smartly targeted and categorized, and move beyond typical
posters, greetings cards and flyers into social media territory (Twitter headers, Instagram posts and blog posts), and even business (cards, logos and presentations).
You can import photos, add text, and fiddle around with a wide range of drag-and-drop elements before sharing directly to social media, or saving
your work to your iPhone.
For anyone who wants to design something for their burgeoning home business, or just for fun, Canva is a great place to start. Brushes Redux
Back in 2009, Jorge Colombo did some deft iPhone finger painting using Brushes, and the result became a New Yorker cover.
It was a turning point for iOS and suitably handy ammunition for tech bores who'd been drearily banging on about the fact an iPhone could never be used for proper work. The app sadly stagnated, but was made open source and returned as Brushes Redux .
Now free, it's still a first-rate art app, with a simple layers system, straightforward controls, and a magnificent brush editor that starts you off with a random creation and enables you to mess about with all manner of properties, from density to jitter. Assembly
Developer Pixite is best known for its eye-popping filter apps, and so Assembly was quite the surprise. The app is all about building vector art
from shapes.
Individual components are dropped on to the canvas, and can then be grouped
or have styles applied. It feels a bit like the iPhone equivalent of playing with felt shapes, but you soon realise that surprisingly complex compositions are possible, not least when you view the 'inspirations' tab or start messing about with the 'remix' projects.
For free, you get loads of stuff to play with, but inexpensive IAP unlocks
all kinds of bundles with new themed shape sets to explore. The best free iPhone camera apps and photo editors
Our favorite free iPhone cameras, photo editors and filter effects apps. (Image credit: Adam Stern) FlyScreen - Screenshot Manager
FlyScreen - Screenshot Manager is an image organizer that focuses on screenshots rather than camera snaps. Open it up and your screenshots will be displayed on a scrolling grid. Give the app a little time to rifle through them all and youll be able to search by text that appears within the screenshots very nice.
Naturally, youll likely want to group images in other ways, which is where FlyScreens straightforward tagging system comes into play. There are further nice touches on each images details pane: copy/share actions, a single field that contains all detected text ready for copying, and similar images if very similar screenshots to the one youre looking at exist.
For free, this is a generous app, and an essential download to make more
sense of and get more from your screenshots. (Image credit: Adobe Inc.) Photoshop Camera
Photoshop Camera is a world away from the Photoshop desktop/iPad app, which remains a high-end professional tool likely to baffle and impress in equal measure. Photoshop Camera is instead about creative spontaneity - a way to
add punch and imagination to even the dullest of snaps.
The free iPhone app works in real-time, applying live filters and effects to whatever youre looking at through your iPhones camera. Alternatively, you can load an existing image and have the app transform it into something unrecognizable.
Thats not to say Photoshop Camera doesnt also flirt with the conventional. There are filters for improving snaps of scenery and food. But this apps at its most fun and essential when youre turning whatevers in front of you into an eye-smashing slice of pop art, or having gigantic lollipops embed themselves in an otherwise ordinary landscape. (Image credit: DigitalMasterpieces GmbH) Assembly
On the face of it, Graphite by BeCasso is yet another in a long line of free iPhone apps that turn your photos into a facsimile of art. In this case, its all about sketching, with a smattering of color, instantly transforming even the most mundane snap into an eye-catching combination of scribbly pencil work, pens, and paints.
As ever, the end results can be a touch mechanical, but the effects here are among the best weve seen on iPhone. Whats more, they can be fiddled with to some extent as well. Dip into the Edit tab and you can make adjustments that can radically update the look and feel of your picture.
Delve into your wallet and pay for monthly IAP and you can take things further, even messing around with the strokes laid down by the virtual
artist. (Image credit: TechRadar) Darkroom
Darkroom is a photo editor from the classy end of the spectrum. It also doubles down on productivity.
As soon as you open Darkroom, it has you select an image from your iPhone to work with. You can then set about making it look extra fabulous by way of cropping tools, adjustment sliders, or if youre feeling a bit lazy one-tap filters.
Whatever you create can overwrite the original, or be saved as a copy. In the former case, edits are non-destructive, as are they when using the app
itself. This makes it easy to experiment without fear of ruining your
original image.
For $9.99/9.99/AU$14.99, you can upgrade to unlock a curves tool, a color tool, and dozens of extra filters. But even for free, Darkroom is a prize
app. sok-edit
sok-edit is a collage app that doubles down on immediacy. Instead of neatly aligning photos to a grid, its the digital equivalent of hacking photos to bits with scissors, and sticking them on other photos for purposes of amusement and creativity.
The app is tactile and noisy. You drag to cut out elements, which can then be rotated, resized, cloned and flipped. Most actions come with sound effects. Its all a lot of fun.
The only minor snag is if you have too much fun in the sense of using three layers you have to watch an advert to add another object, or plump for the pro IAP. Mind you, even the latter is a mere US$0.99/99p/AU$1.49, which seems like a bargain for unlimited collage larks. Visionist
Visionist has quite a lot in common with Prisma, in that its using neural networks to transform photos into something resembling art. The main differences with Visionist are that it affords you a level of control Prisma does not, and it doesnt drown you in IAP and endless filters.
In fact, you get just 10 (60 more sit behind a one-off US$1.99/1.99/AU$2.99 payment), but even those have a range that can turn the dullest snaps into something pretty amazing.
This is largely because you can adjust abstraction levels and how images interact; theres support for Portrait images (and depth data is retained during export); and styles can be mixed and merged. Its a world away from Prismas more simple interaction.
For bringing a little artistry to your photos, Visionist is well worth a download, then, whether you stick with the free version or plump for the IAP. Infltr
Infltr started out as a photo filter app for people who considered choosing filters too much effort. You simply dragged your finger across the screen,
and the chosen filter updated live. Simple. Fast. Random .
That tool still exists, but today its just one of several in a photo editor that increasingly has much in common with Snapseed. Now you can make all
kinds of adjustments, from fiddling with brightness through to subtly
altering perspective. Edits are non-destructive, and can therefore be
reverted or changed later.
There are some limitations unless youre willing to subscribe: no HD export, only saving three custom filters (rather than an unlimited number), and the odd locked tool. But the free version is nonetheless a must-have for iPhone photographers who fancy a great toolset with a dash of chance. DailyFocus
DailyFocus wants you to spend five minutes every day becoming a better photographer. This is achieved by way of super-fast lessons short videos
that outline how to succeed regardless of what you face when armed with a camera. (Were not kidding at the time of writing, the days lesson was about lenses, but an upcoming one was capturing eggs and bacon in motion.)
The app gamifies your viewing, listing a daily streak total, and offering further encouragement by way of optional notifications although be mindful those are sent 24 hours after you last used the app.
Also, DailyFocus emphasizes the daily bit. Theres no archive miss a video
and its gone for good. This is likely because DailyFocus is in part a teaser for a CreativeLive subscription; but for the camera-curious and pro photographers alike, its a fab freebie too. Retrica
Retrica is a camera app designed to bring creativity, randomness and character to your iPhone selfies and snaps. Its packed full of filters, which can be manually added live or to existing photos or randomly if you want to try your luck by prodding the shuffle button.
The filters are varied and interesting, and you can add blur and vignette effects. You can also quickly create multi-shot collages, which are automatically stitched together on a grid. There are GIF and video options too.
Perhaps inevitably, the app has its own a social network, and may as well scream We really want to be Instagram! Still, even if you never sign in, Retrica is a superb freebie iPhone camera. Snapseed
Snapseed is a photo editor that marries simplicity and power. At its most basic, it can be a tool for loading a photo, selecting a filter (referred to here as looks), and exporting the result. But its when you delve into the
apps tools and stacks that its true potential becomes clear.
The tools menu, while a bit cluttered, offers a huge range of options for adjusting your photo. You can crop, adjust perspective, edit curves, and add all kinds of filters and effects.
But stacks are arguably Snapseeds best component. The stack is where your edits live, each of which can be updated at any time.
This offers far more flexibility than editors that burn in each change you make. Furthermore, you can save any combination of edits as a custom look
and use stacks to deconstruct pre-loaded ones. Brilliant stuff. Adobe Photoshop Fix
Although creative giant Adobe doesnt seem keen on bringing its desktop software to iPhone in one piece, were nonetheless getting chunks of its power reimagined as smaller, more focused apps. The idea behind Adobe Photoshop Fix is to enable you to rapidly retouch and restore photos on your iPhone using the power of Photoshop.
Some of the features arent anything outside of the ordinary: you get commonplace tools for cropping, rotation, and adjustments. But Photoshop Fix has some serious power within its straightforward interface, too, as
evidenced by excellent vignette, defocus, and color tools.
The best bit, though, is Liquify. Using this feature, you can mash a photo to bits or make really subtle changes, depending on the subject matter. And if youre facing a portrait, you can specifically fiddle with features, in a manner usually associated with high-end PC software. Prisma
Prisma wants to turn your photos into tiny works of art. Doing so is almost disarmingly simple: shoot or select a photo, crop your image, and choose an art style. (Options in the vast library of filters range from classic paintings through to comic book doodling.)
The app within a few seconds then transforms your photo into a miniature Picasso or Munch, and its instantly better than most of us could ever hope to achieve with Photoshop.
On trying Prisma with a range of imagery, we found it almost never comes up with a duff result, thanks to some insanely smart processing. But if you find the effects jarring, a slide of your finger can soften your chosen filter prior to sharing your masterpiece online. These are the best photo editing apps you can download right now The best free movie and entertainment apps
for iPhone
Our favorite free iPhone apps for having fun, whether reading, coloring or watching TV. (Image credit: Lumen Digital) The Wallpaper App
The Wallpaper App makes your iPhone a little more swish by way of some arty wallpaper but rather than giving you an endless feed of JPEGs to download, this app affords you a modicum of control over its output.
Swipe left or right to switch styles. Within a style, you can tap the left or right of the screen to load a new variation. Swipe upwards and you gain
access to more controls, to adjust the wallpapers lightness and color. Even sharing provides a range of options, giving you wallpaper optimized for your device, or setting your output for alternate screen sizes.
If your wallpapers are always photos of amusing cats or real-world
landscapes, perhaps steer clear. But otherwise, The Wallpaper App gives you
an endless number of unique designs for no outlay whatsoever. (Image credit: Brent Simmons) NetNewsWire
NetNewsWire is an RSS reader. This technology has fallen out of fashion, but were not sure why. It enables you to subscribe to sites you love, and to get every headline piped directly to an app. You can then read any article from your feed, or jump to the original piece in a browser.
The technology is handy, then, and this app is a great way to use it. If you just want to run RSS on your iPhone, you can subscribe to feeds directly in-app. Need sync? NetNewsWire supports the Feedbin and Feedly services.
Users of RSS readers Reeder and Unread might pine for visual customization features NetNewsWire lacks, but we were impressed by this apps no-nonsense system-oriented styling, and the inclusion of vitally important features,
such as loading full content from synopsis-based feeds. (Image credit: TechRadar) Byte
Byte fills the void left behind when Vine vanished. That video-based social network filled your feed full of six-second recordings of joy, humor, music, and general weirdness. Byte similarly provides a mix of entertainment and creative scope. Of course, Bytes not alone in this space TikTok, for
example, offers a similar experience. But Byte nonetheless has a lot going
for it.
When browsing, you can quickly get to fun stuff, and follow your favorite creators. But where the app excels most is in making recording simple. You
can add clips from your camera, but the app mostly wants you to hold its record button to build up your six seconds. Simple stuff, then, but fun and engaging all the same. (Image credit: Astrio, LLC / TechRadar) Sofa
Sofa is designed to help organize your downtime. More specifically, its made to help you list amazing media youd like to check out, and then keep track of it. In short, its a lists app. You make lists, and then populate them with movies, TV shows, music, podcasts, books, and video games.
The approach is cruft-free, which is a good thing. Sofa is about saving you time, and wont suck you into an unnecessary social network. And for the most part, it works really well.
The one failing is books. Sofas library is missing a lot of titles and frustratingly you cant add anything on an ad hoc basis. For screen-based and audio entertainment, though, it works like a charm, whether youre adding top-notch TV masterpieces or a selection of classic games youve always wanted to play. (Image credit: CERN) Big Bang AR
Big Bang AR isnt the best app if youve already got an ego, given that it kicks off the creation of the universe in your outstretched hand. After that explosive moment, your local environment becomes an AR swirl of building blocks, as a virtual take on the universe forms.
With narration by Tilda Swinton, basic interaction, and a zippy journey through 13.8 billion years of history (finishing, naturally, with a selfie), Big Bang AR feels like a home take on an exhibit you might find at a science museum.
However, brevity doesnt detract from the experience, and theres further reading on steps in the journey for those who want to dig deeper. Great
fodder for curious kids and any adult who wants to go a bit William Blake
and hold infinity in the palm of their hand. (Image credit: TechRadar) GIFwrapped
GIFwrapped is an iPhone app for the GIF-obsessed. You can check out GIFs
from a small range of broad categories, such as happy or sad; but the universal search bar enables you to drill down much more rapidly.
When you find something you like, it can be added to GIFwrappeds internal library. The app enables you to quickly make your own custom GIFs, too,
albeit merely by grabbing Live or Burst photos from your iPhone if you want to add amusing text overlays, youll need another app for that.
Still, sharing is a breeze, GIFwrapped works seamlessly in Messages, and if you grab the subscription IAP, you can turn off adverts, bookmark searches, and remove the GIFwrapped water
--- D'Bridge 4
* Origin: Physics (1337:3/125)