JuiceSSH – Give me my pro features back

Beloved Android app locks out old buyers, fans cry ‘scam’ and start DIY fixes

TLDR: JuiceSSH stopped honoring old Pro purchases and raised prices, igniting accusations and a DIY fix from the community. Commenters split between patching, jumping to alternatives like Android’s Terminal, and cracking jokes about cursed code—highlighting trust issues when a beloved paid app seemingly locks loyal users out.

The Android crowd is in full meltdown: JuiceSSH, once the go-to app for logging into remote computers from your phone, stopped honoring old Pro purchases and bumped the price by $20. Support? Silent. Some users are shouting “exit scam!” while one crafty poster dropped a DIY patch guide that reads like spy fiction—lots of scary acronyms and code talk—prompting equal parts applause and side‑eye. Twosdai chimed in with a simple “nice work,” but the mood quickly split between patch-and-protest and move-on-already.

The nostalgia is real—JorgeGT misses the cloud backup and sync that made JuiceSSH feel premium, and asks for alternatives. Cue sowbug’s hot take: skip the drama and use the new Terminal app on Android 15, basically a mini Linux in your pocket (Android 15). Others floated automation tools to make patching easier, which sparked a debate over legality, risk, and whether folks should grab APKs from random sites. Meanwhile, PortableCode roasted the whole scene by calling the code “object‑oriented assembly,” which is as cursed as it sounds.

In short, the community is torn: some want their paid features back yesterday, others are already shopping for replacements, and everyone’s trading memes about fixing your own app like it’s a broken toaster.

Key Points

  • Author reports JuiceSSH stopped recognizing prior Pro purchases after December 2025 and its price increased by $20.
  • Some users reportedly could not activate Pro features even after re-purchasing, and support was described as unresponsive.
  • The article presents a technical method to restore functionality by decompiling the APK and modifying validation logic in smali code.
  • Tools cited include JADX, ApkTool, and OpenJDK’s jarsigner; instructions reference Windows setup via Chocolatey.
  • The author recommends obtaining the APK from APKPure or via adb and verifying integrity using VirusTotal/sha256sum, providing a SHA-256 for version 3.2.2.

Hottest takes

“This might be a good plug for Morphie or Revanced patches” — cremp
“I’d use the newish Terminal app… It’s a full Debian virtual machine” — sowbug
“smali code is funny to read… object-oriented assembly (feels so wrong)” — PortableCode
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