Weekly Bug Crawl by QAwerk: ACC – Live Wallpapers for iOS
ACC – Live Wallpapers offers a lot of ways to personalize your device. It has a lot of top-quality wallpapers, backgrounds, and themes, and every day there’s something new. There aren’t many layers in it, so you would think that an app like this one barely has any bugs. It’s a pity, but today we’re going to prove this statement wrong.
Same header content after you change a filter on ‘Wallpapers’ page.
Minor
- Open ‘Wallpapers’ page.
- Tap on ‘Wallpapers’ button on top.
- Choose ‘Sports’ or ‘Animals’ category.
iPhone 6s (iOS 11.4)
‘Nature’ wallpapers are shown.
Wallpapers are shown according to the chosen category.
No tracker for unmarked favorite wallpaper.
Minor
- Open ‘Wallpapers’ page.
- Open any wallpaper.
- Tap on a ‘Star’ button to mark current wallpaper as favorite.
- Open ‘Favorites’ page.
- Unmark a ‘Star’ button.
- Go back to ‘Favorites’ page.
iPhone 6s (iOS 11.4)
Current wallpaper is still shown on ‘Favorites’ page and page need to be refreshed manually.
Current wallpaper is not shown on ‘Favorites’ page.
Download counter doesn’t change after downloading a wallpaper
Minor
- Open ‘Wallpapers’ page.
- Pay attention to the download counter of a chosen wallpaper.
- Open a chosen wallpaper.
- Tap on ‘Download’.
- Watch the ads video and tap on a ‘Download’ button again.
- Go back to ‘Wallpapers’ page.
- Pay attention to the download counter.
iPhone 6s (iOS 11.4)
Download counter remains as before the download.
Download counter of a chosen wallpaper is increased by 1.
Endless preloader after you tap a ‘Refresh’ button on a ‘Purchase’ page
Major
- Open a ‘Purchase’ page.
- Tap on a ‘Refresh’ button.
iPhone 6s (iOS 11.4)
Eternal preloader is shown and further work of application can not be continued.
Valid data is shown on the screen properly.
Do you have a set of apps that give you no discomfort, that are truly pleasant to use, that deliver everything they’re supposed to? Once you find your apps, they’re going to follow you on every one of your new devices. You just don’t want to uninstall any of them. So why it seems that so little developers pursue the goal for their apps to remain on users’ phones forever?