Music Player Plus

Leopard V7
4.6
Rating
10K+
Downloads
$3.99
Price

Screenshots

About this app

About Music Player Plus

As someone with a music library that’s a chaotic mix of old MP3s, high-res FLACs, and random recordings, I’ve bounced between a dozen different players. I downloaded Music Player Plus on a whim, mostly because I was tired of apps that couldn’t handle my variety of files. For $3.99, I figured I’d give it a shot, and I haven’t looked back. It’s become my daily driver for everything from my morning commute to late-night listening sessions.

Features & Highlights

The feature list looks good on paper, but it’s how they work in practice that sold me. The equalizer is a standout; I’m no audiophile, but I could immediately tell the difference when I switched to the “Rock” preset for my classic rock playlist—the guitars just had more bite. The crossfade is another small thing that makes a big difference. I have this playlist for hosting friends, and the smooth, 5-second fade between tracks keeps the vibe consistent without those awkward silences. I also rely heavily on the sleep timer. I set it for 30 minutes every night, and it’s been a game-changer for my wind-down routine. Having lyrics pop up automatically is a fun bonus, especially when that one obscure B-side from my favorite band comes on and I can finally learn the words.

User Experience

This is where Music Player Plus truly shines. The interface is clean but not sterile. I remember the first time I opened it: the app scanned my device and presented everything in a logical way—artists, albums, songs, genres—without any promotional clutter. Finding my old workout playlist took two taps. Last week, I was on a flight with no wifi, and being able to access my entire downloaded library without a hitch was perfect. There was one moment that sealed the deal for me: I found a folder of live concert recordings in .WAV format from years ago that other players stuttered on. Music Player Plus played them flawlessly, with the crowd noise and everything. It felt like it was built for real, varied music collections, not just streaming services.

Pricing

At $3.99, it’s a straightforward one-time purchase. There are no subscriptions, no “pro” tiers locked behind more paywalls, and no ads. Compared to free apps that are ad-supported or have limited features, this is a no-brainer if you value a clean experience and own your music. For the price of a coffee, you get a permanent, powerful player. I’d say it’s absolutely worth it for anyone with a local music library.

Updates & Support

The developer, Leopard V7, seems active. I’ve seen two minor updates since I installed it a month ago, mostly bug fixes and compatibility improvements. I did have one question about organizing playlists by folder, so I used the in-app support form. I got a helpful, non-automated reply within 48 hours that walked me through the process. It wasn’t instant, but it was clear they read my email and understood my issue.

Security & Privacy

I downloaded it directly from the official Google Play Store. The app permissions are minimal and make sense—it needs access to media files on your device to play them, and that’s about it. I’ve seen no evidence of ads, in-app trackers, or data mining. The privacy policy is clear: it doesn’t collect your personal data or library info. For a locally-focused music app, this is exactly what you want—it stays on your device.

Ratings & reviews

4.6
★★★★½
5
4
3
2
1

App information

DeveloperLeopard V7
Version7.9.2
RequiresEveryone
Downloads10K+
Price$3.99