In the grand theater of Android history, Google Apps packages — or Gapps — rarely take center stage. But for custom ROM users in the mid-2010s, they were the unsung heroes. And among them, Gapps 6.0.1 holds a special, slightly grimy place.

Long live the bridge.

Enter Gapps 6.0.1.

These packages came in flavors as varied as craft beer: (only the Play Store and bare framework), Nano (adds Google Search and voice), Micro (Gmail, Calendar, Maps), right up to Stock and Super — which replaced nearly every AOSP app with Google’s own (launcher, dialer, messaging, keyboard, even Chrome).

For a user in 2016, downloading the right Gapps package for your ARM, ARM64, or x86 device was a ritual. Wrong version? Bootloop. Wrong Android security patch level? Setup Wizard crashes endlessly. But when it worked — chef’s kiss — your recycled Galaxy S4 or Nexus 5 felt like a Pixel.

Now, with Google apps preinstalled on almost every certified device and Gapps packages fading into legacy status, 6.0.1 stands as a quiet monument. A time when you could still strip Android down to its bones and build it back up, piece by piece, starting with a tiny signed zip.

It wasn’t glamorous. It was a zip file, 80–500 MB, flashed via TWRP. But Gapps 6.0.1 represented something pure in Android’s messy ecosystem: the freedom to choose your Google experience — or as little of it as you wanted.