Many bank-specific wallets also use device account numbers. Storing full credit card numbers and the associated cryptographic keys on a device's application processor (like many wallets on Android do, both Google Pay and others) is a big no-go, and even for secure element based solutions like e.g. Apple Pay it's a big advantage being able to lock the number for a lost/stolen device server side without having to reissue the associated physical card and vice versa.
> do card issuers actually have payment apps? my bank doesn't
They've been somewhat popular regionally, especially in countries where Google took their time with rolling out Google Pay support in, or for regional payment schemes that aren't supported in Google Pay. (They're only possible on Android; iOS hasn't traditionally supported the necessary APIs, until very recently when the EU forced them, and still only offers them there).
I don't think they ever were a big thing in the US.
Many bank-specific wallets also use device account numbers. Storing full credit card numbers and the associated cryptographic keys on a device's application processor (like many wallets on Android do, both Google Pay and others) is a big no-go, and even for secure element based solutions like e.g. Apple Pay it's a big advantage being able to lock the number for a lost/stolen device server side without having to reissue the associated physical card and vice versa.
> do card issuers actually have payment apps? my bank doesn't
They've been somewhat popular regionally, especially in countries where Google took their time with rolling out Google Pay support in, or for regional payment schemes that aren't supported in Google Pay. (They're only possible on Android; iOS hasn't traditionally supported the necessary APIs, until very recently when the EU forced them, and still only offers them there).
I don't think they ever were a big thing in the US.