My Piano
Simple touchscreen piano with limited sounds and no learning tools
Simple touchscreen piano with limited sounds and no learning tools
My Piano keeps things bare-bones, turning your screen into a compact keyboard that stretches to roughly two octaves. Tap to play, slide to reach more keys, and you are making noise in seconds. If all you want is a straightforward way to plunk out melodies, this does the job without distractions.
The feature list is short. You get a small palette of eleven instrument voices, including staples like piano, organ, and guitar, so you can quickly change the tone of your playing. A built-in recorder lets you capture your sessions, which is handy for jotting down an idea or sharing a simple riff. Beyond that, there is little to explore.
Sound quality is the stumbling block. The tones come across as thin and synthetic, recalling budget 1980s keyboards, and not in a nostalgic or characterful way. Notes lack warmth and realism, so complex passages tend to feel brittle. That could be acceptable in a playful toy, but the app does not compensate with engagement features.
There are no tutorials, no play-along songs, no multiplayer, and no competitive challenges. Without learning aids or game-like modes, it struggles to hold attention after the initial curiosity wears off. You can record, switch voices, and noodle, but you will not find tools that encourage growth or keep practice sessions fresh.
As a minimal piano you can open for a quick melody, My Piano is fine. If you need better instrument realism or features that guide practice and make repetition enjoyable, it falls short. The concept is appealing in its simplicity, yet the sparse options and dated sound set make it feel like a missed opportunity. It suits casual tapping, but aspiring players will likely look for something more capable.
Developer
Borce Trajkovski
OS
Version
4.5
License
Free