Assembly Language Guide

Assembly Language Guide
Assembly Language Guide
Developer: AndroFrenzy
Category: Education
9.8K installs
Ratings not yet available
165 monthly active users
$<10K monthly revenue est.
IAP 0% · Ad 100%
Install Trends
Weekly +32
Declining
Monthly +679
Trending

Assembly Language Guide Summary

Assembly Language Guide is a ad-supported Android app in Education by AndroFrenzy. Released in May 2020 (5 years ago). It has about 9.8K+ installs Based on AppGoblin estimates, it reaches roughly 165 monthly active users and generates around $<10K monthly revenue (0% IAP / 100% ads). Store metadata: updated Sep 5, 2025.

Recent activity: 32 installs this week (679 over 4 weeks) showing exceptional growth View trends →

Store info: Last updated on Google Play on Sep 5, 2025 .


0★

Ratings: 0

5★
4★
3★
2★
1★

Screenshots

App screenshot
App screenshot
App screenshot
App screenshot

App Description

Assembly, simplified: clean lessons, bookmarks, and private progress.

Meet Assembly Language Learning — a clean, offline roadmap of numbered chapters designed for fast, focused learning without distractions.

Numbered, chapter‑first approach that keeps study flow simple and structured.

Read status and favorites sync instantly on‑device to track progress privately.

Offline HTML content loads quickly with local CSS and image embedding for smooth reading.

Minimal, modern visuals with a consistent blue theme for long, comfortable sessions.

Built for students and grads revising systems, compilers, and low‑level fundamentals.

What’s inside

Core Assembly concepts: syntax, addressing modes, registers, memory segments, and system calls.

Hands‑on topics: variables, constants, arithmetic, logical ops, conditions, loops, and procedures.

Advanced chapters: recursion, macros, file management, and memory management with examples.

Privacy and footprint

No accounts, no tracking, no personal data collection; progress is stored locally.

Ads are disabled by default; ad code is guarded behind feature flags for future opt‑in.

Who this is for

BTech/CE students, graduates, and self‑taught developers learning low‑level programming.

Busy learners who prefer crisp notes and a clear progression path over heavy textbooks.