About Echoist — Offline Music
I was looking for a simple, no-nonsense music player for my downloaded MP3s and FLAC files, and Echoist from WAKStudios popped up. I’m tired of streaming services that lose my tracks when I’m on the subway, so I decided to give this free app a proper test drive. It’s basically a modern, polished version of the old-school music players I grew up with, but designed for how I use my phone today.
Features & Highlights
The core feature is, of course, offline playback. I loaded it up with my own files, and everything just worked. The playlist creation is super flexible; I made one for my morning runs and another with calming acoustic tracks for winding down. I really appreciate the sleep timer—I use it every night. The search function is snappy, which is a lifesaver when I have thousands of songs. One hidden gem I found is the tag editor. I had some messy file metadata from years ago, and I was able to clean up artist names and album art right within the app, which felt very satisfying.
User Experience
Opening the app feels clean. There’s no bloated homepage trying to sell me anything. My library is front and center. Last week, I was on a long flight with no Wi-Fi, and being able to just tap my “Flight Mix” playlist and have it play perfectly was exactly what I needed. The interface is intuitive; I figured out how to create a playlist from an album by long-pressing in about ten seconds. The audio quality is great, and I noticed it handles high-bitrate files without stuttering. My only hiccup was when I first imported a massive folder—it took a minute to scan everything, but it was a one-time thing.
Pricing
The app is completely free with no hidden paywalls for core features like playback, playlists, or the tag editor. There are banner ads at the bottom of some screens, but they’re static and not video ads, so they’ve never interrupted my music. There’s an optional one-time purchase to remove these ads if they bother you. For a fully-functional offline music manager, the free version is incredibly generous and feels complete.
Updates & Support
I’ve seen a couple of minor updates during my testing, mostly for bug fixes and performance tweaks. The version history shows the developer, WAKStudios, is actively maintaining it. I emailed support once with a question about a specific audio format, and I got a helpful, human response within two days, which is better than I expected for a free app.
Security & Privacy
I downloaded Echoist directly from the official Google Play Store. Since it plays local files, it doesn’t require invasive permissions. It asks for storage access (to read your music files) and optionally for media management (to edit tags). I didn’t see any requests for contacts, location, or other personal data. The privacy policy is straightforward: they state they don’t collect or share your personal data. The ads appear to be served through standard networks, but with the app working offline, there’s minimal data exchange happening.