TikTok has had a wild start to 2025. The app was banned in the United States, went dark, then came back online. New users can’t download it, since the app hasn’t returned to U.S. app stores, but those with existing access to the app (or simply the website) can continue watching videos like the ban never happened—at least, for now.
The thing is, ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, has owned and operated other apps within the U.S. You might’ve learned that over the past couple weeks, as other popular apps went dark and disappeared from app stores alongside TikTok. While these apps were not a part of the major discussion around the ban, they all should, in theory, have many of the same concerns that caused the government to go after TikTok. ByteDance is based in China, and, as such, would be beholden to the Chinese government should the latter ask for the data of any American users.
In fact, the ban makes it clear no ByteDance app is safe. At the top of the law, it says the act’s goal is “To protect the national security of the United States from the threat posed by foreign adversary controlled applications, such as TikTok and any successor application or service and any other application or service developed or provided by ByteDance Ltd. or an entity under the control of ByteDance Ltd.”
Since then, all the apps on this list have been removed from app stores, and while most allow you to use them if you already had the app on your phone, only one has been added back to marketplaces.
TikTok
This is the big one: ByteDance, of course, owns TikTok, the app at the center of all this national security drama. You might be addicted to the app yourself.
What you might not know, however, is that the TikTok we know started out life not as a ByteDance property, nor as “TikTok” itself; rather, the app was originally called Musical.ly, and was designed for users to post short videos lip-syncing to popular songs. It amassed a large following, which caught ByteDance’s attention, just as it had its sights set on expanding its short-form social media app, Douyin, globally. ByteDance went international with a new version of Douyin, TikTok, in 2017, and almost immediately after, acquired Musical.ly for nearly $1 billion.
The rest, of course, is history. TikTok has become a world-wide phenomenon, capturing the attentions of one billion users. 170 million of those users happen to be in the U.S., which makes you wonder how a looming ban of the app will affect TikTok’s bottom line.
TikTok Lite
If you have an Android device, you might have seen TikTok Lite before. This app is TikTok, only a lighter, more streamlined version. Like other “lite” apps, this one is designed for phones with limited RAM, data, or unstable connections.
TikTok Lite is not that popular, especially when compared to TikTok proper. It only has 100,000 downloads compared to TikTok’s more than one billion. It wasn’t a part of the ban discussion, but it’s currently off the Play Store nonetheless.
TikTok Studio and TikTok Shop Seller
TikTok Studio isn’t made for consumers. Rather, it’s an app for TikTok creators to manage posts on their accounts. Similarly, there’s TikTok Shop Seller Center, an app for users who sell products on TikTok to manage their digital shops.
CapCut
In the past, if you wanted to get into video production, you need to spend quite a bit of money: You needed a camera, a computer, and editing software, none of which came cheap, and most of which required a good deal of technical know-how. These days, anyone with a smartphone can make videos. Many of us interested in doing so have turned to CapCut, which just so happens to be owned by none other than ByteDance.
To say CapCut is popular is a wild understatement. The app has over a billion downloads on Android alone, and is also available on iOS, Mac, and Windows—assuming you downloaded it before the ban. (It’s also available on the web.) Like other video editors, CapCut offers tools for chopping up your clips into content to post on your socials, but there are a number of extra features available as well. That includes templates to get a part of your video started, video effects, AI features, music integration, stock videos, and more.
All these features aside, the reason CapCut is so popular has likely just as much (if not more) to do with the fact that it is owned by the same parent company as TikTok. That means a few things: CapCut offers an easy workflow from editing to posting on TikTok; TikTokers use the app and promote it themselves; and ByteDance can advertise CapCut on TikTok as much as it wants. If you missed out and can no longer download CapCut, there are other great alternatives you can try.
Hypic
On the other side of the editing aisle, there’s Hypic, ByteDance’s photo editing tool. This app isn’t nearly as big as CapCut, but it’s still pretty large (over 10 million downloads on the Play Store). The app offers standard photo editing tools, but also other perks: There are AI-powered tools, such as cutouts, background removal, and filters; a feature that lets you add “trending” makeup to images; and other options, like stickers and templates.
Lemon8
In protest of the government’s potential ban on TikTok, users flocked to other Chinese-based social media apps in protest. One of those apps was Lemon8, a “lifestyle” social media platform. Like TikTok, Lemon8 also supports video sharing, but that’s not its only focus. Users can also post images, including to carousels, offering an Instagram-like experience. Plus, you can engage with multiple types of content at the same time, akin to Pinterest. As Jessica Maddox, associate professor of digital media technology, tells NBC News, “If those three apps came together and had a baby, it would be Lemon8.”
It’s not clear how popular Lemon8 still is now that isn’t not available on app stores, however.
Marvel Snap (returned to app stores)
Marvel Snap is a popular mobile card game, incorporating character from the Marvel universe. Players draw decks of 12 cards, and play for control of three locations. Whichever player controls at least two locations after six turns wins. While Marvel itself might be an American property, the game is operated by Nuverse, which is a ByteDance subsidiary. As such, Marvel Snap was snapped out of existence (or, at least, from app stores) following the ban.
However, as of Jan. 28, the app is back. As The Verge reports, the game developers are working to bring “almost all operational and publishing responsibilities in-house,” working Skytone Games, a U.S.-based publisher. It’s the first of the ByteDance apps to return to app stores since the ban.
Land of Empires
Land of Empires is another game owned by Nuverse. This title is a strategy game that pits you against an enemy army of demons. Like other strategy games, you fortify your lands, fight enemies in combat, and engage in large battles. It’s not quite as popular as Marvel Snap, but it’s not all that niche, either, sporting over a million downloads on the Play Store. It, however, has not returned.
Lark
Chances are, you’ve never heard of Lark. (I certainly hadn’t.) Lark offers a collection of business apps and services. The standalone Lark app for iOS and Android is described as a “team collaboration” app, which, for all intents and purposes, means its basically a Microsoft Teams or Slack competitor. Lark has features like in-app messaging and video calling, as well as collaborative document sharing.
This probably isn’t something you’ll ever use on your own, but rather a service you use through your company. It’s likely one of the smaller groups affected by the ban.
Tokopedia and Tokopedia START
Tokopedia is a shopping service based out of Indonesia, but it had apps available to users in the U.S. prior to the law. Also available from the company was Tokopedia START, an app that appears to have been made for a 2022 tech conference. Tokopedia, as you may have guessed, is a subsidiary of ByteDance.