How Audify plays your music
No marketing adjectives on this page — just how the player is built: the dual playback engine, the 10-band equalizer, the formats it reads, and where it can send sound.
A dual playback engine
Audify runs two audio engines: ExoPlayer (Google's open-source media engine, the one behind YouTube Music) as the primary, and Android's native MediaPlayer as the fallback. For every file, the player picks the engine best suited to that format automatically — you never choose, it just plays.
Around the engines sits an audio-focus management layer: it pauses for calls and voice assistants, hands audio back when they finish, and coordinates with other apps so two things never blare at once.
The 10-band equalizer
The equalizer gives you ten adjustable frequency bands plus three dedicated effects — bass boost, virtualizer and reverb — with presets and custom presets that survive app updates. Prefer your phone maker's audio processing? Switch Audify to the system equalizer instead; both options are free.
Honest note: equalization runs on Android's audio-effects framework, and its exact behavior can vary between phone makers. If a preset sounds off on your device, tell us at feedback@audifyplayer.com with your phone model — real device reports are how the EQ gets better.
Ten bands, 31 Hz to 16 kHz — plus bass boost, virtualizer and reverb.
Formats it reads
Lossless included — FLAC and WAV play free, no upgrade.
Where the sound can go
Android Auto on Android; CarPlay with Drive mode on iPhone.
Cast music and video to Chromecast devices.
Voice assistant support, lock-screen controls and home-screen widgets.
Offline-first, by design
Audify never requires an account. Your library lives on your phone, organized six ways (songs, albums, artists, genres, folders, playlists). Even radio personalization — the "Picked for You" shelf — is computed on your device from local listening history, not on a server. The internet is for optional extras: lyrics, casting, radio streams, Google Drive backup and ads in the free version.
