Forget Niagara and Nova, this minimalist launcher is my new favorite for old Android hardware
Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more. Take a moment to think about which Android app is at the center of your smartphone. If you answered the phone app, youโre likely still stuck in the early 2010s. But if you answered the launcher, youโd be
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Take a moment to think about which Android app is at the center of your smartphone. If you answered the phone app, youโre likely still stuck in the early 2010s. But if you answered the launcher, youโd be correct. Thatโs why picking the right home screen makes all the difference to the quality of your phone usage experience.
This is even more important when choosing a home screen for an older or less equipped device. I found myself in this predicament recently when I pulled my grand old Android tablet from the depths of the defunct device drawer. One UI Home just wasnโt cutting it anymore, so I sought a minimalist, lightweight Android launcher to bring back some much-needed pep. The answer, Iโd soon discover after trawling F-Droid, was Mako .
Iโve used a handful of stripped-down launchers in the past, but none quite as streamlined as Mako. It drops all the fluff that many modern launchers include, from AI integrations to widget support, and prioritizes app shortcuts.
Letโs talk about setup first. While I could spend hours setting up Nova Launcher and Octopi Launcher in the past, Mako is about as install-and-go as it gets. The launcher uses a single screen that displays the most pertinent information in a single built-in widget, including the time, date, current day of the year, ambient temperature, and battery details. Itโs useful and adds a pop of color, but I do wish it included size tweaks and full weather condition details.
Initially, Mako lists all apps alphabetically on the home screen, which is a complete nightmare if you have hundreds of apps installed. However, the launcher encourages users to create groups and structure these apps. Grouping is effectively the only organizational tool at your disposal, and this is something of a boon. Iโve found that the more management tools a launcher offers, the more time I waste managing them.
On my old Samsung tablet, which is now my e-reader of choice, I have just a handful of apps installed. I use Makoโs groups to organize my most accessed reading-related apps at the top, utilities in the middle, and everything else below. Groups can also be collapsed, allowing me to effectively hide the apps I donโt use often. This works like a charm. And if you canโt find what you want in the moment, Mako includes a bottom search bar.
Makoโs featherlight construction translates into speedy performance. Itโs rapid even on my 2019 Galaxy Tab A, and while it looks good, it keeps eye candy to a minimum. That said, Mako is one of the prettiest home screen experiences on Android. Its use of sharp angles, even in the default font choice, is refreshing in a world trending towards rounded corners and soft fades.

