Trending Apps
17 apps ยท 17 with a recorded certificate
Trending here means best-rated, and nothing more than that. There is no engagement signal behind this page, no partnership deal, and no editorial thumb on the scale โ it is the catalogue ordered by rating, top down. We would rather tell you the rule than imply a ranking process we do not run.
Treat a high rating as a reason to look, not a reason to trust. Ratings describe how an app behaves for people who liked it enough to say so; they say nothing about whether the file in front of you is the one the developer built. A repackaged app inherits the real one's reputation and none of its accountability. The fingerprint on each listing is the part that answers that question.
Everything below has been traced to a publisher we can name. Where the app is on an official storefront, that link sits at the top of the listing and we do not try to outrank it โ the store copy has the shortest chain of custody available. Where we host or mirror a build instead, the listing carries its SHA-256 hash, the signing certificate fingerprint, the version code, and the full permission list, so the file can be checked before it is installed rather than trusted after.
Before you install anything from this page
How is this list ordered?
By rating, highest first. That is the entire rule. We do not track download velocity, we do not weight by recency, and no publisher can pay to move up it. If you change the sort in the toolbar the page reorders on the same set of apps โ nothing is added or removed by sorting.
Does a high rating mean an APK is safe to install?
No, and the gap between those two things is the reason this site exists. A rating reflects the experience of people using the app the developer shipped. A repackaged build carries the same name, the same icon and the same reputation, plus whatever the repackager added. Nothing about the rating changes when that happens. The signing certificate fingerprint does.
How do I check an APK is genuine before I install it?
Two checks, both on the listing page. Hash the file you downloaded with SHA-256 and compare it to the hash we published โ if one byte differs, the whole hash differs. Then compare the signing certificate fingerprint to the publisher's earlier releases. Android enforces that match itself: it will refuse an update signed with a different key than the version already installed, which is why a matching fingerprint is meaningful evidence and a matching version number is not.