Local File Browsing and Folder Control
ZArchiver focuses on direct storage navigation. Users can open internal storage, browse folders such as Download, Documents, DCIM, and app directories, and switch between file views for a clearer picture of what is stored on the device.
The interface is intentionally compact: folder rows, dates, file counts, sorting controls, and a floating create button keep the main workflow close to normal file-manager habits. This is useful when a user wants to move quickly rather than step through a cloud-first document app.
Because the app handles local files, Android storage access matters. Users should grant broad file access only when they really want ZArchiver to read, modify, and delete files across shared storage.
Archive Creation and Multi-Select Workflows
The app includes create, multi-select, view, sort, and settings controls that support common archive tasks. Users can prepare multiple files, open the action menu, and manage compressed packages without moving to a desktop computer.
This makes ZArchiver practical for downloaded APK files, backup folders, shared document bundles, and compressed media collections. A user can inspect a directory, select items, create an archive, or extract an existing package from the same file list.
The compact dark interface also helps when working through long folders because file names, folder icons, counts, and modification dates remain visible while action controls stay nearby.
Version 1.0.10 Tools and Themes
Version 1.0.10 notes mention faster file operations, SUI support, an E-Ink theme, drag-and-drop files in or out from ZArchiver, and other fixes and improvements.
Those updates fit the app's role as a utility for users who care about speed, compatibility, and flexible storage workflows. The E-Ink theme can also help people who use low-glare displays or prefer a simpler visual mode.
The package declares storage, foreground service, superuser, Shizuku, cloud-plugin, and USB-plugin capabilities. Those features are powerful, so users should review them in relation to the file tasks they actually plan to perform.