Another Crucial Reason Why App Developers Prefer iOS to Android

While the fight between iPhone and Android persists, the fact is that no matter what platform you choose, you’ll get a great experience
Another Crucial Reason Why App Developers Prefer iOS to Android
An attendee holds a Samsung Electronics Co. Galaxy SIV smartphone, left, next to an Apple Inc. iPhone 5 during the Galaxy SIV unveiling. Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images
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While the fight between iPhone and Android persists, the fact is that no matter what platform you choose, you'll get a great experience. There’s great hardware on either side and amazing apps to complement them. Sure, iPhone has definitive advantages over Android, but, in turn, Android outshines iPhone in some ways.

However, there’s still one key area where iPhone always wins that Google has not managed to address.

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App piracy is the one Android “feature” that deters developers from focusing on Android first. We’ve heard it all too often over the years, and the problem still affects app makers.

The most recent example of this, as highlighted by Forbes and The Verge, is the critically acclaimed app Alto’s Adventure. A $2.99 game on iOS, the endless runner will cost Android users precisely $0. Instead, they will be hit with advertising, which is the only way developers think they can monetize this highly-acclaimed application.

“We think we’ve been able to find a balance that lets us treat players in a fair way,” Ryan Cash, from developer Snowman’s Ryan Cash told The Verge. “[They] can still get the same premium experience you get on iOS, but without needing to pay upfront.”

Snowman partnered with Noodlecake to bring Alto’s Adventure to Android, with the latter explaining that it’s the high rate of piracy on Android that convinced them to go for ads rather than an upfront fee.

“Piracy on Android is a much bigger issue on the platform especially in the case of premium iOS titles that charge more than $0.99,” Noodlecake’s Ryan Holowaty said.

The company, who also ported iOS game Wayward Souls to Android, found that 11% of installed copies were paid for. Moreover, the studio made available a special Android version of Shooting Stars on torrent sites, one that can’t be completed if you’re playing a pirated copy.