

It isn't fair to keep forcing users to use the slow and unintuitive Microsoft Store app to ensure their apps are updated or to download new ones.

If Microsoft isn't going to give the Microsoft Store app the treatment it deserves, then Microsoft needs to kill the Microsoft Store and figure out a new way of ensuring in-box apps remain up to date. There are some big names in the Microsoft Store such as Spotify, iTunes, Netflix, Adobe Lightroom, Adobe Elements, and Facebook Messenger to name a few.

If an app is in the Microsoft Store, that's where I prefer to download and install it, because it's supposed to be a much more streamlined and secure experience. One-click install and uninstall of apps is my dream. Even Xbox thinks it sucksĭon't get me wrong, I love the idea of the Microsoft Store. For example, here in the UK, the "Devices" tab that those in the US have access to isn't there, yet devices are still listed in the Microsoft Store app when you search for them. Plus, in some regions, not all categories show up along the navigation bar at the top. This is the furthest from a streamlined app store experience an app store can get. So when Microsoft decided that it no longer wanted Office to be part of the Microsoft Store, instead of removing its apps, it just made the install button redirect to your web browser, where it would then download the manual Office desktop installer. The Microsoft Store's original promise was that it provided a safe and streamlined way of download apps. But it also happens with app updates too. This is mostly observed with medium to large sized apps and games. Downloads will cut out half-way through, with useless errors that give no explanation as to why the download has failed. It's an app for downloading apps and games, and a lot of the time it fails at that task. The biggest offender is that the Microsoft Store doesn't work. Clicking on important buttons such as "install" also takes several seconds to do anything, and more often than not I have to press the install button multiple times before something happens.

Clicking on an app takes several seconds to load that apps product page. This same treatment should absolutely apply to the Microsoft Store on Windows 10 as well, but so far there's no sign of a new Microsoft Store app for desktop in the works.Īnother offender is that the Microsoft Store app is slow. Xbox is about to launch a brand-new Microsoft Store app on Xbox One and Xbox Series X, which is a complete rewrite of the storefront with a new Fluent Design interface that's faster and way more intuitive. Source: Windows Central (Image credit: Source: Windows Central)įirst, it's not the prettiest looking app on Windows 10.
