Wallpaper Engine alternatives for Mac
Wallpaper Engine — the popular Steam app for animated, interactive and video wallpapers — runs only on Windows. Three Mac apps cover most of what it does, with one significant trade-off each. Here is which one to pick.
Quick recommendation
- Best free, technical users: Plash — open source, web pages and videos as wallpapers.
- Best library of pre-made animated wallpapers: Live Wallpaper & Themes 4K Pro (Mac App Store, £4-7/mo subscription).
- Best free with built-in library: Animated Wallpapers (Mac App Store, free with ads).
Plash — closest to Wallpaper Engine in spirit
Free, open source, available from sindresorhus.com/plash or the Mac App Store.
Plash sets any web page as your desktop wallpaper. That sounds limited until you realise: video files become wallpapers via a simple HTML page, animated SVG backgrounds work natively, three.js demos run as wallpapers, and the entire web is your library.
What it does well:
- Genuinely no cost.
- No subscription, no ads, no telemetry.
- Per-display settings — different wallpaper on each monitor.
- Pause when on battery power (huge for laptop battery life).
- Browser-based interactivity (mouse moves change the wallpaper, etc.) when you point it at the right URL.
What it does not do:
- No built-in library — you find or create the content yourself.
- No support for Wallpaper Engine's proprietary scene format.
- Configuration is per-URL; not as polished as a curated app.
Live Wallpaper & Themes 4K Pro — the curated library option
Mac App Store. Subscription, around £4-7 per month or £25/year.
The most direct equivalent to Wallpaper Engine's content library. Several thousand pre-made animated wallpapers across categories (nature, abstract, anime, gaming, scenic). Search and filter, one-click apply, dual-monitor support, multi-format (video, animated images, dynamic).
Pros:
- Genuinely large library, regularly updated.
- Mac-native, low CPU usage even on M-series chips.
- Quality of curation is reasonable.
Cons:
- Subscription model — most users object to paying continuously for wallpapers.
- No way to import your own Wallpaper Engine downloads.
- Cancel-and-resubscribe behaviour is sticky; some users report difficulty cancelling cleanly.
Animated Wallpapers (free with ads)
Mac App Store. Free, ad-supported.
Smaller library than the paid option, but free. Quality varies — some wallpapers are clearly upscaled stock footage, others are well-produced. Ads appear as occasional pop-ups when launching, not embedded in wallpapers themselves.
Use case: try this first to see if you actually use animated wallpapers daily. If you do, upgrade to a paid option. If you do not, save the £30/year.
iWall (free, technical)
Open-source command-line and GUI tool. Plays video files as wallpapers, including looping MP4s and animated GIFs. Less polished than Plash but works for users who already have video files they want to set as wallpapers.
Best for: users with their own video collection (e.g. footage from games, downloaded animations) who want a no-frills way to use them.
What you genuinely lose vs Wallpaper Engine
Three things from the Wallpaper Engine experience do not have a direct Mac equivalent:
- The Steam Workshop community. Wallpaper Engine's library is enormous because anyone can publish wallpapers and the install is one click. Mac alternatives lack this network effect.
- Audio-reactive wallpapers. Some Wallpaper Engine wallpapers respond to system audio (visualizers, etc.). No Mac alternative does this well as of 2026.
- Proprietary scene format. Wallpaper Engine has a custom scene editor that lets users build interactive wallpapers; this format cannot be played anywhere else.
If you specifically want to use the Steam Workshop library, the only realistic option is to dual-boot Windows or run Windows in a VM — both of which are heavier than the wallpaper experience justifies for most users.