Apple Music released their annual Music Replay - a look back on your most streamed artists, songs, albums, and genres in the past year.

The interactive feature has been a pop culture moment annually, exploring each user's very diverse and unfiltered listening experience history in the past year.

Get Your Apple Music 2023 Replay

For those who want to get their Apple Music 2023 Replay, you can head to any browser on their mobile smartphones or desktop devices and go to replay.music.apple.com.

After signing up your Apple ID, they will be headed to Apple Music's website. Click "Jump In" to see your journey. Once loaded, click "Play Your Highlight Reel."

As soon as you start the highlight reel, Apple Music will show you a milestone tracker - showing if you have met a certain target while using the service such as listening to over a thousand songs in the span of a year.

Some users are welcomed with how many minutes they listen to using Apple Music in a year.

In exploring your Top Artist, Apple Music will select the most listened one among all the artists whose songs you have listened to in the past year. In the end, it will show the Top 5 artists you've listened to, including how many plays you had.

As for your Top Song, Apple Music shall also be revealing which song is your anthem of the year. It's going to show how many plays you did for that song alone, as well as the run down for the Top 5 songs and their corresponding plays.

The same goes with identifying your Top Album of the Year, the streaming platform will determine the most played album among all the albums you've played - even showing you the comparison between the Top 5 albums you've played in the past year.

Almost at the end, Apple Music Replay will also show which genre you have listened to in the past 12 months.

READ ALSO: When Will Spotify Wrapped 2023 Be Ready?

Apple Music 2023 Replay Needs A Revamp?

While the whole interactive feature of Apple Music 2023 Replay is fun for some, many tech-savvy users hoped that the feature should have been weaved on the actual application itself and not on an external website.

"I'd hope that more things are web first experiences. So many things have no need to be an app at this point. If it doesn't use device specific features, please just be a website. Then it is cross platform and far less likely to be able to spy on you in any meaningful way," a user said on The Verge.

"They have the literal design and marketing team to revamp this feature, and make it as pop culturally relevant as Spotify Wrapped. Apple always squandering marketing their own online services," another compared.

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