Okay here we go.
Man, I really thought moving out to this little edge-of-Faridabad-but-still-basically-Delhi suburb was gonna give me darker skies in 2026. Spoiler: it did not. There’s still that monster orange glow from the highway and like seventeen wedding lights every weekend. So yeah, the best stargazing apps for 2025 have basically become my only shot at pretending I can see anything beyond Orion’s belt and a couple angry planets. https://stellarium-mobile.org
I’m lying on this ratty blanket in my tiny backyard right now (January 13, 2026, 5:47 PM IST just passed, sky’s finally getting decent), phone overheating in my hand, and I’m gonna tell you which stargazing apps actually held up for a chronically light-polluted, easily distracted, mildly tipsy American-minded guy like me.

Features | The Harvard Advocate
Half the articles are just affiliate-link farms that haven’t left their city apartment since 2022. They’ll tell you every app is “life-changing” and then you download it and it wants $80/year to tell you Sirius is above your head when you can literally see it with your naked eye through the smog. https://stellarium-mobile.org
I paid for three premium versions last summer during a camping trip in Himachal that got clouded out anyway. Learned the hard way which ones are actually worth the money when you’re back in civilization fighting light pollution.

Night Sky → pretty interface, terrible AR tracking in anything but perfect conditions. Kept thinking Venus was Alpha Centauri. Also pushed notifications like “A new star is born tonight!” when it was just an airplane. Hard pass. https://stellarium-mobile.org
So yeah… those are the best stargazing apps for 2025 that survived my chaotic testing. If you’re also stuck under light pollution and just want something that doesn’t make you feel dumber, start with Stellarium Mobile or Sky Tonight.
What are you guys using right now? Drop your go-to in the comments—or tell me I’m wrong about Star Walk 2, I can take it.
Clear skies (or at least less orange skies), wecefo, lying in Faridabad pretending the stars are still there
Okay here we go.
Man, I really thought moving out to this little edge-of-Faridabad-but-still-basically-Delhi suburb was gonna give me darker skies in 2026. Spoiler: it did not. There’s still that monster orange glow from the highway and like seventeen wedding lights every weekend. So yeah, the best stargazing apps for 2025 have basically become my only shot at pretending I can see anything beyond Orion’s belt and a couple angry planets. https://stellarium-mobile.org
I’m lying on this ratty blanket in my tiny backyard right now (January 13, 2026, 5:47 PM IST just passed, sky’s finally getting decent), phone overheating in my hand, and I’m gonna tell you which stargazing apps actually held up for a chronically light-polluted, easily distracted, mildly tipsy American-minded guy like me.

Features | The Harvard Advocate
Half the articles are just affiliate-link farms that haven’t left their city apartment since 2022. They’ll tell you every app is “life-changing” and then you download it and it wants $80/year to tell you Sirius is above your head when you can literally see it with your naked eye through the smog. https://stellarium-mobile.org
I paid for three premium versions last summer during a camping trip in Himachal that got clouded out anyway. Learned the hard way which ones are actually worth the money when you’re back in civilization fighting light pollution.

Night Sky → pretty interface, terrible AR tracking in anything but perfect conditions. Kept thinking Venus was Alpha Centauri. Also pushed notifications like “A new star is born tonight!” when it was just an airplane. Hard pass. https://stellarium-mobile.org
So yeah… those are the best stargazing apps for 2025 that survived my chaotic testing. If you’re also stuck under light pollution and just want something that doesn’t make you feel dumber, start with Stellarium Mobile or Sky Tonight.
What are you guys using right now? Drop your go-to in the comments—or tell me I’m wrong about Star Walk 2, I can take it.
Clear skies (or at least less orange skies), wecefo, lying in Faridabad pretending the stars are still there
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