The is a root-level modification designed to transform the Android user interface (UI) into a near-perfect replica of Apple's iOS. Unlike standard launcher apps from the Play Store, Magisk modules provide deeper system integration, allowing for smoother animations, modified system icons, and revamped control centers. Key Features of iOS Magisk Modules
A recovery tool like TWRP or OrangeFox helps you remove the module if your device fails to boot.
Flashing systemless modules carries inherent risks, including potential bootloops. Ensure your device meets the following criteria before proceeding:
Launch Magisk Manager. Tap the Modules icon (puzzle piece) at the bottom right.
It replaces your stock launcher rather than running on top of it. Key Features of the iOS Magisk Module
Modifying system files carries inherent risks, including bootloops. Ensure you meet these requirements before proceeding:
If your phone gets stuck on the boot animation, boot into your custom recovery (like TWRP) and use the file manager to delete the module folder from /data/adb/modules/ , then restart.
| Requirement | Details | |-------------|---------| | Root | Magisk v24+ (Zygisk optional) | | Architecture | ARM64 (most common) | | Android Version | 10–14 (varies by launcher app) | | Modules | Busybox (recommended for scripting) | | Storage | ~50 MB free in /data/adb/modules/ |
System-wide deployment of official iOS icons and functional widgets (Weather, Battery, Calendar).
Back up all critical personal data before flashing any system-level mod. Step-by-Step Installation Guide
If you only want the look without root, use:
Play Store launchers run as a background service on top of your existing system UI, draining battery and RAM. Magisk modules replace the default launcher entirely, optimizing system resources.
Xiaomi users have a special module that converts MIUI’s Poco Launcher into a near-perfect iOS clone, complete with MIUI’s own Control Center tweaked to mimic iOS.
