Let me highlight some quite unexpected (to me) geometric applications of the recent work on integral $p$-adic Hodge theory. Namely, prismatic cohomology, along with a $p$-adic form of the Riemann--Hilbert correspondence, was used critically in Bhatt's proof of Cohen-Macaulayness of absolute integral closures. The main theorem is the following:
Let $R$ be an excellent noetherian domain with an absolute integral closure $R^+$. Then the $R/p^n$-module $R^+/p^n$ is Cohen-Macaulay for all $n\geq 1$.
This is a version in mixed characteristic of a theorem of Hochster--Huneke in positive characteristic. (Interestingly, the theorem fails completely in equal characteristic $0$, and the result proved by Bhatt was largely considered too optimistic, so it was never conjectured in print.) The theorem immediately implies the direct summand conjecture and various strengthenings, including the existence of weakly functorial big Cohen-Macaulay algebras (proved previously by André). In fact, one can now simply use (the $p$-adic completion of) $R^+$ as a big Cohen-Macaulay algebra.
There is also a geometric version, giving a mixed-characteristic variant of Kodaira vanishing, see Theorem 1.2 in Bhatt's paper. Briefly, while Kodaira vanishing may fail, it can be corrected by passing to a finite cover.
These results are in turn used to establish the minimal model program for arithmetic threefolds, see here and here.