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Amazon Fire TV Cube review

Amazon Fire TV Cube is the entertainment control center we've waited decades for

Amazon Fire TV Cube
Amazon Fire TV Cube
MSRP $119.99
“The Amazon Fire TV Cube isn’t just a great streaming box, it’s the entertainment control center we’ve waited decades for.”
Pros
  • Unprecedented hardware control
  • Lightning fast processor
  • Intuitive voice recognition
  • 4K, HDR, Dolby Atmos
  • Ethernet adapter included
Cons
  • No Dolby Vision

When Amazon officially announced its new Fire TV Cube, the device was oversimplified in headlines as a Fire TV stick and Echo speaker crammed together into a glossy black box. The fact that the Fire TV Cube would be able to control a TV was almost a footnote, and descriptions of those capabilities were often limited to turning the TV on and off and its volume up and down. Turns out, the Fire TV Cube is more advanced than that. Way more.

The Fire TV Cube puts Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant in a Fire TV device, but thanks to HDMI CEC and an IR blaster, the Fire TV Cube also makes you master of your entire entertainment system (even if it’s complicated) using the power of your voice. On paper, it sounds great. In practice, it’s far better than we expected.

You won’t be throwing your remote controls in a garbage bin and saying goodbye forever, but the Fire TV Cube will allow you to stuff those button-laden wands in a drawer and forget about them for days at a time. That’s only part of the reason the Amazon Fire TV Cube is our favorite streaming box — and this coming from a die-hard Roku fan.

(Editor’s Note: A new version of the Fire TV Cube released in 2019 offers even more reasons to love the box, adding a faster processor and, most importantly, support for the latest HDR formats including HDR10+ and Dolby Vision. This 2nd gen version is also compatible with two-way video calling when paired with a compatible webcam.)

Out of the box

Amazon smartly packages the Fire TV Cube in entirely recyclable packaging with no fluff involved. In the box, you’ll find the Cube wrapped in plastic and further protected by plastic film.

If you end up tossing the plastic away before reading the setup alert printed on it, take note that you’ll want to set the Fire TV Cube up in a visible place (don’t tuck it away behind a cabinet door or drop it behind a wall-mounted TV), and at least one foot away from any speakers so that the microphones built into the top of the Cube can easily distinguish voice commands from TV programming or music.

In the box with the Cube, you’ll find an Ethernet adapter (if you’ve got a hardline internet connection best to use it, but Wi-Fi is built in), power cord, an extendable IR Blaster with a cable of generous length, and a Fire TV voice remote with batteries.

Yes, the Cube, which touts voice commands as its primary feature, still benefits from having a remote from time to time. Plus, not everyone is into using voice for everything – sometimes you just want a clicker to get the job done.

Setup

Amazon does a great job making Fire TV Cube setup as intuitive and easy as possible. If you order the Fire TV Cube directly from Amazon using your Amazon account, for instance, it should arrive already signed into your account. Otherwise, the Cube’s setup wizard will first ask for Wi-Fi sign-in credentials (if you don’t use Ethernet to connect to your router), then get you to input your Amazon account information. Following that, you’ll be prompted to add any of the super-popular apps Amazon thinks you might want, and while those apps download in the background, the Fire TV Cube gets to work learning about your entertainment system.

If all you’ve got is a TV, then this part of the process will go quickly. The Fire TV Cube can recognize many newer TVs automatically and will just verify it can successfully control power, volume, and mute functions before running you through a video tutorial.

If you use a soundbar or A/V receiver, the setup process is a little more involved, but the Fire TV Cube does a good job of helping sort out how you have your gear connected. During our setup process, it seemed as if Amazon assumed we would plug the Fire TV Cube into an A/V receiver directly. It ran a bunch of tests to ensure it was able to turn both the TV and receiver on and off, control volume, etc., and the system did work.

However, we currently have our sources connected directly to our TV, with an audio signal going to our receiver using HDMI ARC, and with this arrangement, we had to make a few changes in the settings menu to ensure that, when using Fire TV Cube, the receiver switched to HDMI 2 for our ARC feed. We assume something similar may take place if using a soundbar in a similar configuration.

What Amazon doesn’t seem to prompt you to do is to go into all applicable devices and turn on HDMI CEC (Consumer Electronics Control). We had to turn HDMI CEC and HDMI ARC on for our LG E8 OLED TV and Anthem MRX-1120 A/V receiver to ensure all went smoothly. Some TVs (many from Samsung, for example) come with CEC enabled automatically, but others don’t, so be sure to dig into your settings menu to be sure.

From there, it’s up to you to add any other devices you want the Fire TV Cube to account for. We added a Blu-ray player and a PlayStation 4 console, but if we had a cable box or satellite receiver, you can bet we’d have added those since controlling cable/sat boxes and accessing live TV is one of the things the Fire TV Cube does best.

Features and design

We’re going to go out on a limb and presume you’re familiar with Fire TV and Amazon Alexa basics, just so we can dig right into what makes the Fire TV Cube special (there’s a lot). In case you need a refresher, though, here’s our review of the third-generation Fire TV box and the latest Amazon Echo speaker to get you up to speed in a jiffy.

Describing the Fire TV Cube as an Echo and Fire TV smooshed together is as inaccurate as it is reductive. The Fire TV Cube can do many things a Fire TV operated by an Echo speaker can’t outside of hardware control.

Amazon Fire TV Cube
Bill Roberson/Digital Trends

For instance, you can tell Alexa to tune into ESPN on Xfinity, Dish Network, or DirecTV and it will change the TV’s input to whichever cable/satellite box is connected, then change the channel on the cable box to ESPN. You can also specify the channel number you want. But what we liked best was telling Alexa to tune to a specific TV show and have her simply launch the TV show on the right channel.

If you’re a cord-cutter, we have great news: Amazon Fire TV Cube works with PlayStation Vue and Hulu Plus Live TV right out of the box.

If your system is too complicated for some folks in your home to understand, the Fire TV Cube unlocks it for them.

One of the most notable changes to the Fire TV platform that we noticed while testing the Cube was how Amazon puts apps on a more level playing field, both on its home screen and through search. It used to be that if you searched for House of Cards, Amazon would serve up its own Prime Video paid option over the obviously free availability on Netflix.

With the Fire TV Cube, if you ask it to play House of Cards, Ozark, Handmaid’s Tale, or any other number of original shows from competing services, it will go straight to the correct app and (provided you’ve got a subscription) start playing the show. If you ask to watch a show that isn’t available for free from one of your subscribed services, the Fire TV Cube will show you what your options are, even if what you want isn’t available on Amazon’s own Prime Video service.

This app-agnostic approach plays out on the Fire TV Cube’s home screen as well. We noticed a “Netflix recommends,” and “Vudu recommends” strip loaded with shows we recently watched and other options like those shows we’ve watched in the past. It wasn’t even necessary to go into the Netflix app to restart Ozark — it was right there on the Fire TV Cube’s home menu; that feels like a big leap forward for Amazon. Heck, now that Google and Amazon have thawed their streaming feud, you can even get YouTube on your Fire TV Cube.

Streaming guides

Of course, if you want to jump away from the Fire TV Cube’s onboard streaming options, it will help you get to your Blu-ray player, Xbox, PlayStation, and even Roku device. Under the settings menu for device management, you can specify exactly which TV input, soundbar input, or A/V receiver input each device is connected to. So when you say, “switch to PlayStation,” everything adjusts in concert. If your system is too complicated for some folks in your home to understand, the Fire TV Cube unlocks it for them.

Consider as well that the Fire TV Cube provides almost everything an Echo speaker does (save communications and whole home audio), but it also brings new visuals to the table. Asking about the weather shows the current temperature and conditions on a weather screen, playing music calls up album art, checking on your commute shows the commute time and best route. And if you use Alexa to control smart home devices, the video element comes in super handy. Now you can look at any security cam footage right on your TV – it’s everything you already love about Alexa on the biggest screen in the house.

Oh, and the Fire TV Cube provides excellent sound, too. Since it connects via HDMI to your soundbar or audio system, it provides a digital signal for your gear to decode rather than relying on the cheap DAC inside an echo speaker to do the job and shove it out a headphone jack.

So, what’s the catch?

There aren’t any major downsides to the Fire TV Cube.

Unlike the Fire TV Stick 4K, the Cube doesn’t support Dolby Vision, much to the chagrin of videophiles, but it does support 4K UHD and HDR10 along with Dolby Atmos (with compatible apps). Also, Alexa still likes fairly specific commands — it’s natural language understanding is not as powerful as Google’s yet. To Amazon’s credit, though, the Fire TV Cube makes suggestions on what to say based on what it thinks you might be trying to accomplish, and Amazon says it will be adding and improving voice recognition constantly.

Otherwise, our complaints about previous Fire TV products have all been addressed. We got the Ethernet port, we got a more app agnostic Fire TV OS, and we have all the voice control we could ask for. No other device can do what the Fire TV Cube does, not Roku, not Apple TV, and definitely not Android TV.

Warranty

Amazon offers a free one-year limited warranty, but extended two- and three-year warranties are available for additional purchase.

Our Take

Is there a better alternative?

No. The Roku Ultra is also an awesome streaming set-top box, and we love some of the app integration and search function the Roku platform affords, but when it comes to hardware control and voice control, there’s nothing out there like the Fire TV Cube.

How long will it last?

The Fire TV Cube is built to be constantly improved over several years. The hardware inside is lightning fast now, and it should stay that way well into the future. We’re confident the Fire TV Cube will last as long as it is needed to (in other words, long enough to get you through to the next big thing).

Should you buy it?

Yes. At $120 the Fire TV Cube isn’t exactly cheap, but you definitely get what you pay for. It’s fun, it’s functional, and it does everything a streaming set-top device needs to do, and more. Buy with confidence!

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Caleb Denison
Digital Trends Editor at Large Caleb Denison is a sought-after writer, speaker, and television correspondent with unmatched…
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