Reviewing VLC's privacy practices takes one sentence: there is nothing to review. The Android version of the venerable open-source player requires no account, shows no advertising, sells nothing, and phones home to no one. Its code is public, developed in the orbit of the non-profit VideoLAN project, and its business model is essentially that there is no business model. In a category where every other app monetises your attention or your data, that makes VLC the control group.
As a player, it is defined by omnivorousness. Local files in nearly any format, DVD rips, obscure codecs, network shares, and internet streams all play without hunting for codec packs, and audio gets the same treatment as video. What VLC does not offer is content: no catalogue, no recommendations, nothing to watch that you did not bring yourself. It is a tool in the old sense, and it looks like one too.
Playing files nothing else opens
That video a relative sent in a format your gallery app rejects will almost certainly play in VLC. Its bundled codec support covers formats mainstream players ignore, which is why it survives on so many phones as the fallback of last resort.
Watching from a home network drive
VLC browses SMB shares, UPnP servers, and FTP locations directly, streaming from a NAS or shared folder with no server software, no account, and no cloud in between. For simple local streaming it replaces far heavier setups.
Music and audiobooks from local files
The audio side organises local music by artist and album, handles large audiobook files with playback-speed control and precise seeking, and keeps playing in the background without a subscription, unlike certain video platforms.
Play-anything codec support
Video and audio decoding is built in, covering mainstream and obscure formats alike, with subtitle support including embedded and external tracks. When hardware decoding misbehaves on a device, a settings switch to software decoding usually rescues playback.
Network streaming
Open a stream URL or browse SMB, UPnP/DLNA, and FTP sources from inside the app. Combined with background audio, this turns VLC into a minimalist client for a home file server.
Gesture-driven playback controls
Swipe vertically for brightness and volume, horizontally to seek, and adjust playback speed or audio delay from the player. The controls are dense but learnable, and long-form viewers come to rely on them.
Free software, genuinely
The app is open source under a free license, costs nothing, and contains neither ads nor purchases. Development is funded around the VideoLAN ecosystem rather than by monetising users, which is why the feature list never includes an upsell.