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I can’t find it in the iOS Dev Weekly archive, but I’m sure that I was impressed when I first linked to AltStore, but that I was also sceptical that it wouldn't be with us for long. I thought Apple would either find a way to stop it from working or ask for it to be shut down.

It will surprise none of you that my predictions were wrong. As far as I know, Apple didn’t seriously try to stop it, and it did much more than survive! As soon as third-party app stores were possible, it was one of the first to launch.

Yesterday, AltStore’s future became even brighter as they announced they had secured an Epic MegaGrant. I hadn't heard of Epic's grant program before but it's usually for small teams building projects using Unreal Engine. I'm not surprised they are fans of AltStore, though, given their history with Apple. No matter what you think of Epic, it’s hard not to get excited when a project like AltStore secures a more stable future. A project born not of a desire to profit but to distribute apps¹ that Apple doesn't want on the App Store. I’m also happy to see Epic put their biggest properties on AltStore along with this announcement. It’s a huge boost for the project.

Epic is still going ahead with its own EU-based app store, which is apparently in review with Apple as you read this. I'm not very excited about that store, but it makes sense for them to build it.

Back to AltStore, though. I couldn’t be happier to see this happen², and I hope that the MegaGrant is not a one-time thing, but an ongoing agreement. I'd love to see AltStore thrive for many years because we need more projects like it.


¹ Yes, primarily one specific app, but the vision has expanded since then.

² I’ve still not come around to believing alternative app stores will be a net positive for the platform. However, what I think doesn’t make a blind bit of difference so I think I'll stop adding this disclaimer every time I write about the subject.

Dave Verwer  

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