This Week in Apps is a short, no-fluff, round-up of interesting things that happened in the mobile industry. Here are our top highlights.
U.S. Mobile Download Index: App Store 98.71, Google Play 76.69
📈 While the stock market was raging this week, the Index remained relatively flat, albeit a tad negative, as back to school took away from game downloads across most genres.
The big story this week revolves around the stock market, Reddit, and GameStop. If you haven't heard yet, investors on Reddit were trying to show a short seller who's boss. The world wasn't ready for such a fight.
Robinhood, which established itself as the app for regular people, was where it mostly played out. After a tweet from kingmaker Musk, downloads exploded, lifting Robinhood and Reddit to the top of the App Store. We estimate the uplift to have brought on nearly a million new users to Robinhood this week, triple the previous week, and about a half of that for Reddit.
Early Thursday, Robinhood announced it'll stop trading GameStop. Investors who wanted to get in before the big squeeze flocked to other trading platforms. Trading apps, new and old, all inched their way up the ranks.
The more traditional Fidelity, TD Ameritrade, and E*TRADE jumped into the top 20, and the more modern Webull, which takes on Robinhood directly, jumped to #2, right below Robinhood.
These jumps are as unprecedented for these apps as is everything that's happened with the stock market this week, and also a reminder of how users will jump ship when they feel they're being manipulated.
Most of these apps also stopped trading $GME at some point but resumed very quickly.
Done with finance!
This week, wannabe TikTok rival Clash acquired rival byte in an attempt to take on the king of short-form video.
I looked at the downloads to estimate just how credible of a threat this is, and (un)fortunately, it isn't.
In 2020, Clash, which is only available in the U.S., was download just about 400,000 times across the App Store and Google Play, according to our estimates. byte, which was released in January, had a much nicer year, bringing in an estimated 9.1M downloads.
We estimate that TikTok ended 2020 with 800,000,000 downloads.
Speaking of TikTok...
In China, TikTok's home base, TikTok lite (抖音极速版 - 集音符兑好礼) jumped to the top of the App Store this week.
Downloads nearly quadrupled this week, from around 60K/day earlier in the month to more than 220K every day this week, according to our estimates.
The main TikTok app in China is sitting at #3, averaging 120K downloads per day, based on our estimates.
Last weekend, the UFC held a big fight between Conor McGregor and Dustin Poirier, two big names in the UFC, for those, who like me, weren't aware.
Big names = big bets, giving betting app DraftKings a very big weekend in downloads.
The app, which sees about 2,500 downloads on a regular day, saw downloads more than triple to 29K and 34K on Saturday and Sunday, based on our estimates.
#225 - How many people went non-traditional this election, X and ChatGPT saw their biggest month of revenue, some streaming platforms are stuggling to grow, and more.
#224 - Is Non-Native app development on the rise in 2024? Disney+ and Hulu stop taking new subscriptions on the App Store, Arc Browser goes into maintenance mode, Bluesky takes a new investment round, and the challenge of companion AI apps.