As interesting as this sounds, you should keep in mind this is only a surface-level change, so you’re not suddenly going to get FaceTime or iMessage on your Samsung. Your apps and system settings will stay the same, and data such as contacts and text messages will remain unchanged. Once you install and set it up, the launcher will wrap everything in a different interface, allowing you to enjoy the polished design of iOS without having to pay for your own iPhone or sign up for any Apple services.And if you change your mind along the way and want to return to your Android ways, know that reversing the process is easy. But all these changes happen on top of Android, so think of launchers as new coats of paint for your phone’s interface. You’ll still have the same apps underneath, and settings you’ve configured (such as Do Not Disturb modes) will work just the same. You can switch between launchers easily, but the option won’t appear until you install a third-party one. From Settings, pick Apps, Default apps, and then Home app to make your pick. If you don’t want to use a particular launcher app anymore, you can simply uninstall it: Tap and hold the icon in the app drawer, then drag it to the Uninstall button at the top. When you install the launcher, you’ll get a long list of customization options you can set up, going from the size of the app icons on your home screen to how the launcher mimics the App Library feature on iOS. It can even make your default Google app icons look like default Apple app icons, making the Google Meet icon look like it’s FaceTime, for example. Get started by choosing your wallpaper, and then you can concentrate on arranging your apps as you want on the home screen. The launcher can replace Android icons with their iOS equivalents—for the main Settings app, for example—and comes with a very authentic-looking Control Center that you can call up with a swipe. Launcher iOS 16 is free to use, but you’ll have to look at quite a few ads. The app is particularly good at letting you drop in widgets on your home screen that look just like the ones you get on the iPhone for weather and battery life, for example. Launcher iOS 15 is also able to update stock Android app icons to look like their iOS equivalents, it comes with its own versions of the Control Center and the App Library, and you can toggle between dark and light modes, too. Phone 13 Launcher is also free to use, but just like the previous entry on our list, it comes packed with a fair few ads. As with the other options in our list, the app is free and ad-supported.