![]() ![]() ![]() Not only that, but iOS doesn't allow users to go out and install application files from outside of the App Store the way Android does. If an app isn't available on the Google Play Store for whatever reason, developers can just share the app file and let people download it anyways. That means they don't show up in the App Library, widgets can't be made for them, and they don't benefit from being more deeply integrated with the whole iOS experience. ![]() Shortcuts for those sites can be added to iOS home screens to make them look like apps, but in the end, they're just a shortcut to a website. For example, the only way Apple would allow Google Stadia and Amazon Luna to exist on iOS is by making users go to their respective websites via Safari. However, going to a mobile website isn't the same 1:1 experience as using a proper application. Apple's argument is that iOS users aren't bound to the App Store because they can seek out apps via the web. ![]()
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