Am I being dramatic? Yes. Has this change made me read on my phone less? Also yes. | Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge
Apple Books has been my main reading app for years for one very specific reason: its page-turning animation is far and away the best in the business. Unfortunately, that went away with iOS 16 and has been replaced by a new animation that makes it feel like youāre moving cards through a deck instead of leafing through a digitized version of paper. And despite the fact that Iāve been trying to get used to the change since I got onto the beta in July, I still feel like Appleās destroyed one of the last ways that my phone brought joy into my life.
For those unfamiliar with Appleās Books app (formerly known as iBooks), Iāll try to explain the hole thatās suddenly been punched into my reading life. Before iOS 16, the app would play a page-turning animation whenever you tapped or swiped on the left or right edge of your device.
What this GIF canāt capture is just how good this feels to use in real life.
It wasnāt just a cheap, pre-baked animation, though; it was one of the pinnacles of the skeuomorphic aesthetic that used to rule Appleās mobile OS. The animation is different based on whether you swipe from the top, middle, or center of the screen, and it tracks your finger; if you swipe from the bottom and then move up, the āpageā will curl upwards instead of flipping to the side. If you start to swipe, then change your mind and move your finger back to the edge, the āpageā falls back down, unturned.
iOS 16ās swipe animation. It feels like Iām reading a PDF, not a book.
As far as I can tell, that experience is completely gone in iOS 16, replaced by an animation that wouldnāt feel out of place in a Tinder rip-off or a PDF-viewing utility app. Iāve searched through every screen in Books and Settings that I can think of and havenāt found any way to get the old flipping animation back. The only option Iāve found to change the page-turning experience is the one that eliminates it completely by turning the book into a single vertically scrolling page, which I somehow find even more offensive than the new animation (though, to be clear, that was also in the old version of the app as well).
Now Iām not going to sit here and critique why all the other reading apps Iāve used fall short of Appleās version in its glory days ā how they either donāt bother including a page flip animation or donāt capture the nuances of shadowing and how a real page reacts to your touch. Not because I donāt want to, of course, but because I feel like itās better to just show you a series of GIFs so you can see for yourself.
E-reader fans might say that I should be doing my reading on a dedicated device thatās not as subject to ever-changing software ā and I admittedly have found that a physical page turn button scratches the same itch that Appleās animation used to, even if the transitions on e-ink displays are usually pretty eh. But even if I were to buy a Kobo or Boox or something, that wouldnāt help me with the dozens of books Iāve already purchased on Appleās platform.
Iām sure there are plenty of people thinking that this is an absolutely ridiculous thing to complain about; I can just feel people typing out āwow, slow news day?ā comments. And yeah, Iāll fully admit that this may be a slightly petty article about a very small thing that probably wonāt matter to very many other people. But it genuinely was a feature that made me choose to buy e-books on Appleās platform instead of anyone elseās ā and given how same-y most book stores and reading apps are in the broad strokes, it really is the details that get you locked into an ecosystem. The iOS 16 version of the books app does have some genuinely good upgrades, but itās no longer a joy to use; and to me, thatās a real shame.