Kototoro is a free Android app that combines manga, novels, and video into a single reader, pulling content from dozens of online sources while letting users read everything in one place. It includes built-in automatic translation of foreign-language content directly on your device, video quality enhancement, and the ability to sync your library across multiple phones or tablets.
// why it matters The strong contributor count (360) relative to its fork status signals real community momentum around an all-in-one media consumption experience on mobile — a space where fragmentation across apps is a genuine pain point. For builders, this demonstrates demand for unified content aggregation platforms with offline-first, privacy-respecting features like on-device translation, which is a positioning angle that commercial apps have largely ignored.
Kotlin198 stars13 forks361 contrib
New Expensify is a rebuilt version of the popular expense management app, redesigned from the ground up with chat and real-time financial collaboration at its core, available on web, iOS, and Android. Think of it as a messaging app where teams can also manage spending, receipts, and reimbursements all in one place.
// why it matters Expensify is openly rebuilding its entire product in public, which signals a major strategic bet that the future of finance tools looks more like Slack than spreadsheets — a trend PMs and investors in the fintech and productivity space should watch closely. With nearly 370 contributors and thousands of community forks, this open-source approach also creates a moat through community ownership and rapid iteration that traditional SaaS competitors would struggle to replicate.
TypeScript4.8k stars3.7k forks2338 contrib
Keep Android Open is a community advocacy website opposing Google's 2025 policy that would require all Android app developers to register with Google before publishing apps. The site aims to inform developers, consumers, and policymakers about the implications of this change and coordinate opposition to it.
// why it matters If Google's verification mandate goes through, the barrier to publishing Android apps rises significantly — affecting indie developers, startups, and anyone building outside the mainstream app economy. Builders and founders who rely on Android's openness for distribution, especially outside the Play Store, have a direct stake in whether this resistance movement succeeds.
Astro306 stars174 forks104 contrib
ReSukiSU is an open-source tool that gives Android users complete administrative control over their own devices — similar to having full administrator access on a Windows PC — by operating at the deepest level of the Android operating system (the kernel). It's a community-maintained fork of an existing project that adds stability improvements, a customized interface, and support for a wide range of Android devices and versions.
// why it matters A thriving ecosystem of 298 contributors and 515 stars signals strong developer demand for device-level control on Android, which powers the majority of the world's smartphones — this is the foundation layer that security tools, enterprise device management, and advanced mobile apps depend on. For builders, this represents both a platform opportunity (building tools and apps that require deep device access) and a signal that the market for Android customization and security tooling remains highly active.
Kotlin544 stars163 forks301 contrib