Apple announces winners of the App Store Awards for 2022

Today, Apple announced its list of App Store award winners for this year along with the top chart for most downloaded apps and games across free and paid categories. These awards include apps for all of the company’s platforms including the iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Mac, and Apple TV. For 2022, the social network app BeReal won the app of the year award for iPhone, while the notetaking app GoodNotes 5 won the crown for the best iPad app.

Synium Software GmbH’s MacFamilyTree 10 — a visual family tree exploration app —was noted as the top Mac of the year; TelevisaUnivision Interactive’s Vix streaming service was awarded the top Apple TV app for elevating Spanish-language stories; and Gentler Stories’ Gentler Streak, an exercise and fitness tracker, was awarded the best Apple Watch app of the year.

Image Credits: Apple

Electronic Arts’ Apex Legends Mobile snagged the top iPhone game award while X.D. Network Inc.’s Moncage got the top iPad game title. Other gaming winners include Inscryption from Devolver for Mac, El Hijo from HandyGames for Apple TV, and “Wylde Flowers” from Studio Drydock for Apple Arcade. Shenzhen Tencent Tianyou Technology’s League of Legends Esports Manager won the China app of the year.

BeReal was a social media sleeper hit this year forcing giants like TikTok and Instagram to ape the format. The France-based company originally launched the app in 2020. But its format of getting an alert at random times of the day to post a photo combining front and back cameras within two minutes became popular this year. It’s a stark departure that a social app won the best crown app this year as compared to the last two years’ top apps “Toca Life World” (a Kids’ app) and “WakeOut!” (a workout app). In its blog post for awards, Apple described BeReal as an app to provide”an authentic look into the lives of their family and friends.”

Image Credits: Apple

“This year’s App Store Award winners reimagined our experiences with apps that delivered fresh, thoughtful, and genuine perspectives,” CEO Tim Cook said in a statement, “From self-taught solo creators to international teams spanning the globe, these entrepreneurs are making a meaningful impact, and represent the ways in which apps and games influence our communities and lives.”

Last year, Apple had a bonus section called “Apps that brought us together.” So this year, it has introduced a “Cultural Impact” section to honor some apps that had a “lasting impact on people’s lives and influenced culture.” The list includes How We Feel Project’s How We Feel app for logging in daily emotion-based check-ins; Rise-Home Stories Project’s Home Stories Project to highlight stories of systemic housing injustices and their impact on people of color; Locket Labs’ Locket Widget to allow live photo sharing between friends and family through a home screen widget; Vitalii Mogylevets’s hydration tracking app Waterllama; and ARTE Experience’s Inua – A Story in Ice and Time to explore historical events from Inuit tradition.

Image Credits: Apple

App Store has had a challenging 2022 with an impact on revenue and regulatory battles. It had to allow developers to use third-party systems for in-app purchases in regions including South Korea and the Netherlands (just for dating apps). The U.S. and the EU are also looking at ways to control app distribution monopolies across different app stores. These regulations could force Apple to loosen some rules around how it allows app distribution and payments on the App Store.

In March, Apple allowed “reader apps” — apps that give users access to digital content like music, books, and videos — to include external links for users to create and manage their accounts. In June, the company relaxed some of its rules around binary content in the app, using HTML5, and lottery and donation-related apps. In October, it cracked down on NFT functionality within apps, restricting developers from using digital collectibles to unlock new features. Plus, it also mandated that any NFTs purchase system must you Apple’s in-app purchase mechanism, and give a commission to the company. It also updated its guidelines to specify that it will take a cut for buying social media post boosts within the app.

According to industry data, the App Store revenue took a 5% dip in net revenue because of the global economic downturn. What’s more, fluctuating currency prices against the dollar forced Apple to raise prices on App Store across multiple countries in Asia and Europe. On top of all this, Twitter’s new owner Elon Musk has also picked a fight with the tech giant by claiming that the iPhone Maker “threatened to withhold Twitter from App Store.”

Apple also released the top downloaded apps and games across free and paid categories for the year. Here are the top apps in the US:

Top Free Apps

  1. TikTok
  2. YouTube: Watch, Listen, Stream
  3. WhatsApp
  4. Instagram
  5. Google Maps
  6. Google Search
  7. Gmail – Email by Google
  8. BeReal
  9. Facebook
  10.  Cash App

Top Paid Apps

  1. Procreate Pocket
  2. HotSchedules
  3. The Wonder Weeks
  4. Shadowrocket
  5. 75 Hard
  6. AutoSleep Track Sleep on Watch
  7. TouchRetouch
  8. FILCA – SLR Film Camera
  9. SkyView
  10.  My Macros+ | Diet & Calories

Top Free Games

  1. Wordle!
  2. Subway Surfers
  3. Roblox
  4. Stumble Guys
  5. Coloring Match
  6. Count Masters: Crowd Runner 3D
  7. Fishdom
  8. Call of Duty®: Mobile
  9. Parking Jam 3D
  10.  Text or Die

Top Paid Games

  1. Minecraft
  2. Heads Up!
  3. Bloons TD 6
  4. Geometry Dash
  5. Monopoly – Classic Board Game
  6. My Child Lebensborn
  7. Five Nights at Freddy’s
  8. Plague Inc.
  9. Rovio Classics: AB
  10.  Five Nights at Freddy’s 2

Top Apple Arcade Games

  1. NBA 2K21 Arcade Edition
  2. The Oregon Trail
  3. Angry Birds Reloaded
  4. Sneaky Sasquatch
  5. Cooking Mama: Cuisine!
  6. Bloons TD 6+
  7. Skate City
  8. Warped Kart Racers
  9. Solitaire by MobilityWare+
  10.  LEGO® Star Wars™: Castaways

Apple announces winners of the App Store Awards for 2022 by Ivan Mehta originally published on TechCrunch

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