Spotify’s annual Wrapped feature has once again captivated users, offering a personalized look back at their listening habits. This popularity has spurred a wave of other platforms to create similar year-in-review experiences, providing users with recaps of their activity and preferences from the past year. From music and books to fitness and social media, companies are leveraging the appeal of personalized data summaries to engage their audiences.
The trend, initially popularized by Spotify, centers around visually appealing and shareable summaries of user data. These “Wrapped” or “Year in Review” features have become a cultural phenomenon, with users eagerly sharing their results on social media. This article explores the various platforms that have adopted this approach, detailing their offerings and how they compare to the original Spotify Wrapped.
The Rise of the Year-End Recap: Beyond Spotify Wrapped
The core appeal of these recaps lies in the human desire for self-discovery and the enjoyment of sharing personal insights. Spotify successfully tapped into this by presenting listening data in a fun, digestible, and highly shareable format. Now, numerous companies are attempting to replicate that success, offering their own versions tailored to their specific services. This has led to a proliferation of “Wrapped” experiences across diverse digital landscapes.
Music Streaming Services Join the Trend
Amazon Music has launched “2024 Rewind,” its take on the Spotify Wrapped concept. The feature provides users with statistics on their top artists, songs, and podcasts. A unique element of Amazon Music’s offering is a personalized message from a user’s favorite artist, delivered through Alexa. Users can find the feature within the app’s Library tab and share new badges highlighting their listening habits, such as “Trendsetter” for early adoption of popular albums and “Headliner” for being a top fan of an artist.
Apple Music’s “Replay” feature, first introduced in 2019, offers a comprehensive overview of a user’s musical year. This includes top songs, artists, albums, genres, and playlists, along with play counts and total listening time. Apple has expanded Replay with new sections like “Discovery” for new artists, “Loyalty” for consistently enjoyed musicians, and “Comebacks” for artists revisited throughout the year. The experience is available on both the mobile app and the Apple Replay website, and extends to Apple Books with its own Year in Review for readers.
Deezer’s “My Deezer Year” provides a similar summary, focusing on top tracks, artists, albums, and genres. This year’s edition features a “romantic comedy” theme for its visuals and includes interactive quizzes for users to share with friends. Tidal offers a more minimalist recap, highlighting key stats like top artists and total listening time, while YouTube Music’s Recap includes an AI-powered “Ask Music” feature, allowing users to query their listening history.
Beyond Music: Recaps Expand to Other Platforms
The trend isn’t limited to music. Duolingo offers a “Year in Review” that showcases language learning progress, including total XP earned, longest streak, and learning style. Meanwhile, workout app Hevy provides a recap of fitness achievements, detailing workout frequency, top exercises, total volume lifted, and completed sets, even framing weightlifting stats in relatable terms like airplanes.
Twitch has also joined the fray, offering year-end summaries for both viewers and streamers. These recaps highlight top creators, overall watch time, and engagement metrics. To access the Twitch recap, users need to have watched or streamed for at least 10 hours during the year.
Even platforms like Reddit and Mastodon have seen community-driven efforts to create similar recap experiences, demonstrating the widespread appeal of this format. Notably, some users have developed third-party tools to generate recaps for platforms that don’t offer official ones, such as a TikTok recap tool created by Bennett Hollstein, which analyzes exported data to reveal insights into viewing habits.
Other services offering year-end summaries include Circleback, Goodreads, Eight Sleep, Hulu, Pandora, PlayStation, Strava, Tinder, Xbox, and even the grocery store Aldi.
As the year draws to a close, it’s likely that more companies will launch their own versions of these personalized recaps. The success of Spotify Wrapped has clearly demonstrated the value of engaging users with data-driven insights and shareable content. The continued expansion of this trend suggests that year-end summaries will become an increasingly common feature across a wide range of digital platforms. The key for companies will be to offer unique and valuable insights that resonate with their user base, going beyond simple statistics to provide a truly personalized experience.

