Best New Android Apps for December 2025 (Dec 2): Comet, Sift, Escape Launcher, Red Dead Redemption & OmniTools

December 2, 2025
Best New Android Apps for December 2025 (Dec 2): Comet, Sift, Escape Launcher, Red Dead Redemption & OmniTools

December 2, 2025 – The Android ecosystem is closing out the year with a surprisingly strong wave of fresh apps and games. Today’s highlights range from an AI-powered browser and a privacy‑first recipe keeper to a minimalist launcher, a “proper” console classic landing on mobile, and an all‑in‑one utility toolbox. [1]

Here’s a closer look at the five standout releases Android fans should be paying attention to this December, plus a quick rundown of other notable Android app news breaking today.


1. Comet: Perplexity’s AI Browser Finally Lands on Android

Perplexity’s Comet browser has been on desktop for a while, but its full Android rollout in late November turned it into one of the most talked‑about mobile apps going into December. [2]

On the surface, Comet feels familiar: it’s built on the same Chromium foundations as Google Chrome, so page loading, tab handling, and general performance will feel right at home. Android Authority’s December app roundup notes that it adds an ad blocker with tracking protection, a stripped‑down interface, and system‑wide dark mode on top of that solid base. [3]

Under the hood, though, Comet is designed around Perplexity’s AI:

  • AI assistant built into the browser – You can ask Comet to summarise pages, compare information across multiple tabs, draft emails, or research a purchase without jumping between apps. Recent updates let the assistant multitask across tabs and handle longer, multi‑step instructions. [4]
  • Ad‑blocking and distraction reduction – Comet for Android ships with a strong built‑in ad blocker; Perplexity pitches it as a cleaner, less noisy browsing experience, which matters even more on small screens. [5]
  • Pricing tie‑in with Perplexity Pro – The app itself is free on Google Play, but many of the “agentic” features are designed to shine with a Perplexity Pro subscription, which currently starts at $20 per month. [6]

Who Comet is for

  • Power users who already lean on AI for research, summarising long articles, and automating repetitive browsing tasks.
  • Anyone who wants an AI‑first browser that’s more deeply integrated than a simple extension, but still feels like Chrome.

A note on safety: Earlier this year, independent audits from Brave and Guardio highlighted that Comet’s agent could be tricked by malicious pages (indirect prompt injection and phishing‑style attacks). [7] Perplexity has since shipped security and capability updates, but as with any AI assistant that can act on your behalf, it’s wise to avoid letting it handle banking, passwords, or other highly sensitive data without supervision.


2. Sift: A Minimalist, AI‑Powered Recipe Keeper

If your holiday cooking workflow is currently “20 open tabs and a screenshot of a TikTok,” Sift is one of the cleanest new solutions on Android this month. [8]

Android Authority describes Sift as a minimalist recipe manager that uses AI to pull just the useful parts out of recipe sites — ingredients, quantities, timings, and nutrition — and present them in a neat, distraction‑free layout. Instead of relying on a built‑in cloud service, Sift takes a “bring your own AI” approach: you plug in your own API key. [9]

How Sift works

  • Bring‑your‑own model: Sift connects to any provider that speaks the OpenAI‑style API. The developer highlights OpenRouter, OpenAI, and Google AI (Gemini) as popular options, giving you control over costs and which models see your data. [10]
  • Smart recipe import: Paste a URL, and Sift’s AI extracts the recipe content, stripping out the long personal story and leaving you with a clean card you can cook from. [11]
  • Local‑first and open source: The F‑Droid listing and GitHub repo stress that Sift is open source under the MIT licence, stores recipes on your device by default, and ships without ads. [12]
  • Manual entry & tagging: If you’d rather skip AI, you can still add recipes by hand, organise them with custom tags, and keep everything in one place.

Who Sift is for

  • Privacy‑conscious cooks who don’t want a big cloud platform owning their entire recipe box.
  • Tinkerers comfortable setting up an API key with OpenRouter, OpenAI, or Google AI.
  • Anyone who wants a beautiful, clutter‑free recipe app that still feels powerful.

3. Escape Launcher: A Distraction‑Free Android Home Screen

If you’ve ever unlocked your phone to “just check the time” and resurfaced 40 minutes later, Escape Launcher is built for you.

The app is a minimalist home‑screen replacement with one clear goal: reduce the urge to keep doom‑scrolling. Android Authority’s December list calls it “about as barebones as any launcher” they’ve tried — meant in a good way. [13]

From the GitHub project and community pages, a clearer picture emerges: [14]

  • Simple layout: Your home screen shows a digital clock and a short list of favourite apps. Everything else is tucked away.
  • Two core gestures:
    • Swipe left for a searchable, alphabetical app list.
    • Swipe right for a Digital Wellbeing‑style breakdown showing how long you’ve spent in each app today, how that compares to yesterday, and how it lines up with recommended limits.
  • Customization without clutter: Escape supports themes and Material You colour schemes on Android 12+, plus hidden apps for extra focus. Widgets exist but aren’t the star of the show.
  • Modern, open‑source foundation: Escape is licensed under MIT, targets Android 8.1 and up, and is one of the first launchers to support Android 15’s new Private Space feature. [15]

Who Escape Launcher is for

  • Users attempting a digital detox without going to full “dumb phone.”
  • Productivity‑minded folks who want their phone to feel like a tool again, not a slot machine.
  • Fans of minimal launchers like Niagara, AIO, or Olauncher looking for a fresh, open‑source alternative. [16]

4. Red Dead Redemption on Android: Netflix’s Biggest Mobile Game Yet

The headline game news for today is simple: Red Dead Redemption is officially playable on Android as part of Netflix Games, with the mobile version launching on December 2. [17]

Rockstar’s 2010 Western classic arrives in a new multi‑platform port that also hits PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch 2, and iOS. For mobile players with an active Netflix subscription, the game is included at no extra cost — no ads, no in‑app purchases. [18]

What you’re getting on Android today

  • Full base game plus Undead Nightmare: Netflix confirms the mobile release includes the original campaign and the fan‑favourite zombie expansion, effectively giving subscribers two full experiences in one download. [19]
  • Touch controls and modern polish: The new port adds touchscreen controls for mobile devices, while other platforms get 4K/60fps support, HDR, and additional technical upgrades. [20]
  • No extra purchases: As long as your Netflix sub is active, you can download Red Dead Redemption via the Netflix app and play uninterrupted. [21]

For Android gamers, this may be the biggest Netflix Games release to date and a strong signal that “real console games” on phones are becoming normal rather than novelty.


5. OmniTools: A Swiss‑Army Utility App for Everyday Life

Finally, OmniTools – All‑in‑One Toolkit is the sort of app you don’t know you need until it saves you three other downloads. Android Authority highlights it as a multi‑tool that bundles everyday utilities into one clean interface. [22]

The Google Play listing and a deeper dive into the broader OmniTools ecosystem fill in the details: [23]

  • Everyday calculators and converters: OmniTools covers everything from unit and currency conversions (length, weight, temperature, data, time zones) to finance and health tools like loan/EMI, ROI, compound interest, BMI/BMR, and age/date calculators.
  • Real‑world “toolbox” utilities: Built‑in helpers include a bubble level, paint and tile estimators for home projects, a compass, and QR code generation and scanning.
  • Focus & productivity features: A Pomodoro timer and countdowns help you block out study or work sessions without needing a separate focus app. [24]
  • Offline, lightweight, and privacy‑friendly: The Android app is optimized to be small, fast, and battery‑friendly, with no tracking and no data shared with third parties according to its Play Store data safety section. [25]

There’s also an open‑source web suite called OmniTools that bundles over 80 browser‑based utilities for images, PDFs, text, data, and more, designed to run locally or on self‑hosted servers with no ads or trackers. The Android toolkit feels like a natural mobile companion to that philosophy. [26]

Who OmniTools is for

  • Students, freelancers, and anyone who juggles a lot of little calculations and conversions.
  • People who’d rather have one trusted utility app than a folder full of single‑purpose tools.
  • Users who care about privacy and offline functionality as much as they do features.

Other Android App News Breaking on December 2, 2025

Beyond this month’s big new apps, there’s plenty happening in the Android app world today:

1. MKBHD’s Panels Wallpaper App Fallout & Alternatives

Yesterday, Android Authority confirmed that Marques Brownlee’s Panels wallpaper app is shutting down at the end of December, with pro‑rated refunds for subscribers and a promise to open‑source the code under Apache 2.0 once user data is wiped. [27]

Today, a follow‑up feature recommends five alternative wallpaper apps — Backdrops, WallsPy, Tapet, Pix Wallpapers, and Google Wallpapers — for users looking for a new source of high‑quality backgrounds and AI‑generated designs. [28]

2. Pixel Recorder’s “Clear Voice” Gets Renamed and Tweaked

Google is rolling out Recorder v4.2.20251104 to Pixel devices. The update: [29]

  • Renames the Clear Voice noise‑reduction toggle to Auto Clear Voice.
  • Adds a warning that the enhancement uses more storage.
  • Introduces a new chip on the playback screen so you can quickly see when audio has been enhanced and revert to the original track with a tap.

It’s a small update, but for journalists, students, and anyone who records interviews or lectures, the extra clarity and control are welcome.

3. Google May Show Your IMEI on the Lock Screen

An APK teardown of Google’s Personal Safety app suggests a new “Device info” option will soon let users see their phone’s IMEI from the emergency screen without unlocking the device. [30]

Google previously rejected a user request for this exact feature on security grounds, arguing that IMEI is sensitive personal data, so the new code marks a change in thinking. The company appears to be weighing:

  • Pros: Easier for law enforcement or good samaritans to confirm if a device is stolen and return it without needing to wipe it.
  • Cons: Potential misuse by malicious actors who could more easily access your device’s unique identifier.

The feature hasn’t been rolled out yet and may ultimately ship as an opt‑in toggle — or not at all — but it’s one of the more contentious Android tweaks brewing right now.


Final Thoughts

Taken together, today’s crop of apps and updates show where Android is heading at the end of 2025:

  • AI everywhere, from Comet’s agentic browsing to Sift’s bring‑your‑own‑model recipe extraction.
  • Digital wellbeing and minimalism, with Escape Launcher stripping the home screen back to the essentials.
  • Console‑grade gaming on mobile, as Netflix’s Red Dead Redemption port becomes a flagship example of premium, ad‑free mobile gaming for subscribers.
  • Practical, privacy‑friendly tools, embodied by OmniTools’ offline, ad‑free utility suite.

If you’re curating a “must‑try” list for December, these five apps and games are an excellent place to start — and they’re all available now or arriving this week on the Play Store and via Netflix Games.

Top 15 Best Android Apps - December 2025!

References

1. www.androidauthority.com, 2. www.perplexity.ai, 3. www.androidauthority.com, 4. www.perplexity.ai, 5. www.perplexity.ai, 6. www.androidauthority.com, 7. www.tomshardware.com, 8. www.androidauthority.com, 9. www.androidauthority.com, 10. www.androidauthority.com, 11. github.com, 12. f-droid.org, 13. www.androidauthority.com, 14. github.com, 15. github.com, 16. www.androidauthority.com, 17. www.netflix.com, 18. www.netflix.com, 19. www.netflix.com, 20. timesofindia.indiatimes.com, 21. www.netflix.com, 22. www.androidauthority.com, 23. play.google.com, 24. play.google.com, 25. play.google.com, 26. en.androidayuda.com, 27. www.androidauthority.com, 28. www.androidauthority.com, 29. www.androidauthority.com, 30. www.androidauthority.com

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