Publisher Portfolio Viewer
See every app a developer has published on the App Store, with ratings and categories at a glance.
Every App Store listing names its developer, but the store makes it surprisingly clumsy to answer the obvious next question: what else have they shipped? This viewer takes any app or developer name and returns the publisher’s complete public portfolio — every live app under that account, with category, rating, and rating count for each.
A portfolio read tells you things a single listing cannot. It shows whether a competitor is a focused one-app team or a studio running twenty titles, which of their apps carries the business, and what patterns repeat across their lineup — shared keyword strategies, category choices, and naming conventions that reveal how they think about ASO.
How to view a developer’s app portfolio
- 1
Search for any app the developer publishes, or search the developer’s name directly.
- 2
Open the portfolio view to list every app under that publisher account.
- 3
Sort the picture in your head by rating count — it is the quickest public proxy for which apps drive their downloads.
- 4
Click into individual apps to study the metadata of their strongest titles.
Reading a competitor through their portfolio
Portfolios expose strategy at the company level. A publisher with fifteen near-identical utility apps is running a volume playbook — cheap builds, aggressive keyword targeting, quantity over depth — and will defend rankings differently than a studio betting everything on one flagship. Knowing which kind of competitor you face changes how you respond: volume publishers abandon weak apps quickly, while flagship studios fight for every position.
Portfolios also reveal roadmaps. When an established publisher quietly ships a new app in an adjacent category, that is a signal about where they think the growth is. And when several of their apps share a naming pattern (“Brand Scanner”, “Brand Translator”, “Brand Converter”), you can often predict their next release — and get to its keywords first.
Other reasons to look up a publisher
Due diligence is a common one. Before partnering with, acquiring from, or advertising alongside a developer, their portfolio shows their track record: how many apps they maintain, how users rate them, and whether their catalog suggests a sustainable business or a churn-and-burn operation. A wall of 2-star utility apps answers a lot of questions quickly.
It is also useful inward-facing. If you publish multiple apps yourself, viewing your own portfolio the way a stranger sees it — one undifferentiated list with ratings attached — is a sobering audit. Cross-promotion between your own titles works best when the portfolio has a coherent identity, and this view shows whether it does.
Frequently asked questions
Does the portfolio include apps removed from the App Store?
No — the viewer lists apps currently live on the storefront being queried. Apps the developer has pulled, that Apple has removed, or that were never released publicly will not appear, so a portfolio is a snapshot of the publisher’s present catalog rather than their full history.
Why do some companies show multiple developer accounts?
Large publishers often ship through several legal entities — regional subsidiaries, acquired studios kept on their original accounts, or separate accounts for experimental titles. If a company’s best-known app is missing from a portfolio, search that app directly and check which account actually publishes it.
Can I see download numbers for each app in a portfolio?
Apple does not publish download counts, so no public tool can show them directly. Rating count is the standard proxy: apps convert installs to ratings at broadly similar rates within a category, so an app with 200,000 ratings almost certainly out-downloads a sibling with 2,000.
Do portfolios differ by country?
They can. Publishers sometimes release apps only in selected storefronts — a soft-launch title live in Canada and the Philippines but not the US is a classic pattern. Checking a competitor’s portfolio in a few storefronts can surface unreleased-at-home apps they are quietly testing.
Is there a way to monitor a publisher for new releases?
Not with a one-off lookup — you would need to re-check manually. Continuous monitoring of competitor publishers, with alerts when they ship or update apps, is the kind of always-on tracking a dedicated ASO platform handles for you.
Get alerted when competitors ship
Appalize watches your competitor set continuously — new apps, metadata changes, ranking moves — and tells you what changed and when, so nothing in your market surprises you.
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App Comparison Tool
Put two App Store apps side by side and compare their metadata, ratings, categories, and update cadence.
App Availability Checker
Check which country storefronts an app is available in — and which markets it is missing from.