Share your favorite open-source F-Droid apps so more users can find and enjoy them.
How to contribute:
- Single app per comment: mention a single app per comment so popular ones are simple to find.
- No duplicates: check existing comments first.
- Upvote what you like: if you like an app someone shared, upvote it to help others discover it.
Let’s build a useful collection of must-have F-Droid apps!
intelligent spam blocker for SMS and calls
Simple game score sheet
Aves Libre Open Photo Gallery
What’s going on in this thread? Why did a mod remove a comment about Heliboard saying it’s off-topic and not open source?
Shosetsu - The Free and Open Source Novel Reader for Android.
I queue up lots of things from royal road an other sources.
f-droid.
obligatory shilling for LocalSend, it’s airdrop except open-source and completely cross-platform!
Onlyoffice. Despite the controversies with this one, most people use big tech apps sometimes full of ads for simple document editing. Also, onlyoffice is so ligthweight in comparison, that it runs nice even on very low end phones
AudioAnchor. Audiobook player. Works great with Syncthing. Hasn’t been updated in 3 years and doesn’t need to be.
Firefox. Shouldn’t need introduction.
Yes there are forks that may be better to use but let us not forget the one main browser family who’s been giving us a chance at fighting against
Malwarebrowsers with zero respect for our privacy.Being able to have ublock and Bypass Paywalls is legitimately a killer feature and one of the reasons I’d never leave Android.
Being able to use JShelter and Libredirect on mobile is great
AntennaPod Podcast player with awesome ui
Breezy weather. It plays nice with gadget bridge and if you use the git version you can choose all kinds of weather sources, the fdroid one is a bit more restrictive. Also it just looks great and is easy to interpret at a glance.
Obtainium. Lets me install and track apps that aren’t on fdroid yet, or are in alpha release.
Neo launcher
Thumb-Key is a keyboard with an input method that tries to reduce the odds of typos, reducing the need for fancy autocomplete. It takes some time to get used to, but I’m happy with it.







