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Everybody Loves Your Money
Everybody Loves Your Money
Brandon Marcus

20 Useless Apps That Somehow Still Exist (and Make Millions)

Image Source: shutterstock.com

When you scroll through the App Store, you see just about everything. Not just the brilliant, life-changing apps—but the strange, pointless, “why does this exist?” creations that somehow rake in millions of dollars. These apps aren’t helping anyone become more productive, healthier, or wiser, yet they continue to live at the top of charts like unexplainable digital celebrities.

Maybe it’s irony, maybe it’s boredom, or maybe humans are just predictable in the most hilarious ways. Either way, these gloriously useless apps refuse to die—and we can’t stop paying for them.

1. I Am Rich

This notorious app literally existed for no purpose other than flexing wealth. Users who purchased it got nothing but a glowing red gem that served as a kind of digital ego beacon. It didn’t track anything, teach anything, or provide any service whatsoever. Despite its absurdity, enough people bought it to make headlines and a fortune. Proof that sometimes, bragging rights alone can fund an app developer’s retirement.

2. Hold On

This app challenges you to press and hold a button for as long as possible. That’s it—no deeper meaning, no prize, no secret features. It’s a digital endurance contest that rewards absolutely nothing except maybe bragging to friends. Still, millions downloaded it simply to test their own boredom limits. Somewhere, a developer is sipping iced coffee while their app counts the world’s most pointless seconds.

3. Yo

“Yo” sends exactly one message: the word “Yo.” No emojis, no variations, no additional text. The entire communication experience revolves around tapping one button and hoping someone Yo’s you back. Somehow, this minimalist messaging service surged to viral status. It’s like Twitter for cavemen—and yet wildly, inexplicably profitable.

4. Dude, Your Car!

This app lets you paste fake car damage onto a photo of someone’s vehicle. The prank concept is mildly funny once, then confusing after that. Despite being essentially a digital sticker book of dents and scratches, it sold extremely well. People used it to terrify friends, annoy siblings, and briefly entertain themselves. Useless? Absolutely. Profitable? Without question.

5. iBeer

This novelty app turns your phone screen into a virtual glass of beer you can “drink.” As you tilt your phone, the beer drains in surprisingly realistic animation. It doesn’t quench thirst, improve parties, or provide any meaningful utility. Yet for years, it remained one of the most downloaded apps in its category. Apparently, nothing delights humans like pretending to drink pixelated alcohol.

6. Pimple Popper

Yes, this app allows you to pop digital pimples for entertainment. It appeals to those who find gross-out satisfaction in skincare videos taken to a weirdly intimate level. There’s no skill involved, no achievement system, just endless virtual blemishes. But despite (or because of) the weirdness, it exploded in popularity. Millions have spent time they’ll never get back squeezing imaginary pores.

7. Ghost Radar Classic

This app claims to detect paranormal activity using your phone’s sensors, which—spoiler alert—it cannot actually do. Still, it’s been used by countless amateur ghost hunters hoping to contact spirits. Random blips and words appear on-screen, creating eerie but meaningless moments. As useless as a digital Ouija board, yet just as captivating to believers. It’s proof that spooky vibes sell—even if the ghosts don’t.

8. Milk The Cow

This game asks users to milk a virtual cow as fast as possible. If that sounds pointless, that’s because it absolutely is. But for reasons that defy logic, people worldwide competed for top milking speed like it was an Olympic sport. It’s silly, repetitive, and somehow addictive. Clearly, humans will do anything for a leaderboard.

Image Source: shutterstock.com

9. My Virtual Girlfriend

This app provides a cartoon partner who says sweet things and performs basic animations. It doesn’t offer real interaction, depth, or emotional complexity. Yet thousands signed up to date a digital character who lives in your phone. It’s the relationship equivalent of microwaving instant noodles—fast, weird, and mostly pointless. But its fanbase? Loyal.

10. Sleep Sheep

This app shows sheep jumping over a fence—endlessly, silently, and with zero creative variation. It’s meant to help you fall asleep, but really it just gives your brain one more glowing screen to stare at. Despite that, people downloaded it hoping it would magically cure insomnia. Spoiler: it doesn’t. Yet it still thrives on the promise of sleepy sheep dreams.

11. Hair Clippers Pro

Anyone wanting to prank friends pretends to shave their heads with this buzzing, vibrating app. That’s the full feature set: buzzing noise, razor animation, mild chaos. While it offers nothing useful, millions found temporary joy in scaring unsuspecting companions. It’s the prank that never gets old even though the app absolutely does. Still, the downloads keep coming.

12. Bubble Wrap Simulator

This digital bubble wrap lets you pop virtual bubbles forever. The satisfaction is mild, fleeting, and nowhere near the real thing. But when boredom strikes, people apparently turn to fake plastic popping. Its popularity has remained steady for years without evolving at all. Its loyal users would probably pop bubble-wrap air in space if given the chance.

13. Fidget Spinner App

During the fidget spinner craze, this app let people spin a virtual version without needing the real toy. It serves no purpose beyond filling time with pointless twirling. The physics are simple, the visuals basic, yet somehow it became a sensation. Even after the craze faded, the app kept spinning. And spinning. And spinning.

14. RunPee

This app tells you the best times during a movie to go to the bathroom. While vaguely useful, it’s mostly absurd that people rely on a phone to schedule bathroom breaks. It even describes what happens during those scenes so you won’t miss much. Despite the ridiculous premise, it has a massive user base. Evidently, bodily functions are big business.

15. Mood Scanner

Touch your phone, and the app tells you your “mood” using random guesses disguised as analysis. People know it’s fake, yet they keep trying it anyway. Maybe it’s nostalgia, maybe it’s curiosity, maybe it’s boredom—whatever the reason, it won’t die. It’s the digital equivalent of a carnival fortune-teller booth. And like those booths, it makes shocking amounts of money.

16. Celebrity Voice Changer

This app tries to morph your voice into that of iconic celebrities, often with wildly inaccurate results. Still, people spend endless time testing voices that barely resemble the stars they’re supposed to mimic. The charm lies in how hilariously wrong it often sounds. It may not be accurate, but it’s endlessly entertaining. And entertainment pays extremely well.

17. Carrot Weather

This weather app gives forecasts while insulting you for no reason. It’s sassy, sarcastic, and completely unnecessary… yet oddly addictive. Users keep coming back because the snark is more entertaining than the weather itself. It turns meteorology into comedy. And somehow, that turns into serious revenue.

18. Is It Dark Outside?

This app answers a single question: whether it is currently dark outside. You could simply look out the window, yet millions preferred checking an app instead. It’s hilariously redundant but charmingly minimalistic. Maybe people like outsourcing even the simplest observations. Whatever the reason, it continues to shine—ironically—despite its darkness theme.

19. Virtual Lighter

This app displays a lighter flame you can flick on during concerts. It offers nostalgia, novelty, and zero real utility. Yet it became a runaway hit during the early smartphone era and still gets downloads today. There’s something whimsically pointless about waving a digital flame in a crowded arena. And clearly, that whimsy pays off.

20. Cat Piano

This app replaces piano notes with meowing cat sounds, creating musical chaos. Children love it, adults tolerate it, and developers profit from it. It makes no meaningful contribution to the world of music or entertainment. Still, people can’t resist tapping out off-key feline melodies. It’s silly, strange, and somehow a financial triumph.

The World Is Weird, And So Are Our App Choices

These apps prove that usefulness isn’t a requirement for financial success—not even close. Sometimes all it takes is novelty, absurdity, or pure randomness to hook millions of people. And honestly, that’s part of what makes the digital world so entertaining.

Have you downloaded any of these wonderfully pointless apps? Give your thoughts, stories, or hilarious app confessions to other readers in the comments below.

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The post 20 Useless Apps That Somehow Still Exist (and Make Millions) appeared first on Everybody Loves Your Money.

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