Update: Comments from many readers have said that the trick no longer works with the most recent update to the Gospel Library app. We’ve tinkered with it on Android but haven’t gotten it to take. Note that at the time of writing, this is only confirmed to work on iOS. Go and fiddle with this and send us your screen shots of the updated app! The sixth option is far stranger than the rest, as if Moroni is leaning against something for support, but it actually appears to be Legos?! Deseret Bookshelf is a free app which includes LDS general conference talks, which digital library provides the best experience. The gold icon, however, is delightfully gaudy and wholly necessary. (Check out the icon for the non-Mormoned Sacred Music app for reference.) Three icons bring back a gold Moroni in various levels of detail but share many similarities. The default Gospel Library icon is now white with a gradient background, a style the Church has been move toward in most of its digital assets. This is known as the “Konami Code,” after the developer of the game, and it’s hilarious to see it brought into the Gospel Library app, of all places. YouTuber Brad Boyce outlined how to do this in the video below.Īnyone else getting some Contra vibes? For the uninitiated, the classic Nintendo Entertainment System game, Contra, had a cheat code where a user could become essentially invincible and receive unlimited weaponry by tapping Up-Up-Down-Down-Left-Right-Left-Right-B-A-Start. However, it appears that enterprising developers in the Church’s employ have dropped a small little nugget in the Gospel Library app allowing users to change the icon. But in an app produced by the Church? That’s new for all of us. Sure, you expect to find Easter eggs in movies, games, or random apps.
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