Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Prime Video app gets a major update

Amazon today announced a major update to the Prime Video app on Amazon Fire TV devices, as well as on its Android app. The update brings a better navigation menu, makes it easier to find and watch live events — particularly sports — and just overall makes the entire experience better.

The update, some 18 months in the making, Amazon says, will start pushing out this week on living-room devices and should hit Fire TV and Android devices throughout the summer. (Update: The “living room” push also includes Roku, the biggest competitor to the Fire TV platform, along with Apple TV, and Google TV.) Other platforms — like iOS and in Prime Video in a web browser — will follow later.

Prime Video app screenshots on Fire TV.
Amazon

You’ll first notice the biggest change in the top-level navigation menu itself. It’s been moved to the left-hand side of the screen and has six pages within it. There’s Home, Store, Find, Live TV, Free with Ads, and My Stuff. From there you’ll find sub-level navigation which includes things like Movies, TV Shows, Sports, etc. All in all, it should make it a lot easier to find what’s new on Prime Video.

Recommended Videos

And sports continues to play a big role in the Prime Video experience. The NFL’s Thursday Night Football remains a Prime Video exclusive, and Amazon has made it easier to find amongst everything else. The NFL isn’t the only game in town, however, and the Live TV page is the hub for all the real-time streaming, with a grid-based programming guide to make it easier to find what you want to watch. The Sports menu itself has a new design that Amazon calls “cinematic,” with carousels to surface the teams and leagues of interest. You’ll also find extra content like replays and on-demand videos.

More on Amazon Fire TV

The carousels aren’t just confined to the sports content, however. You’ll also find them in other sections, such as Amazon’s “Top 10 Chart” that, obviously enough, shows you the top videos in a given genre or location. Long live the carousels — because you’re getting more of them than ever.

Individual shows and movies and events get a little sprucing up, too, with a new design that makes it easier to tell what’s included with your Prime membership versus what you’ll need to pay a little extra for. A blue checkmark shows you what’s included, and a shopping bag icon shows what you’ll need to rent, buy, or subscribe to.

And a new Find page makes searching for content better than ever. Suggestions are shown before you finish typing (which is pretty much table stakes these days), and you can filter your results by genre or resolution to help winnow things down.

Good stuff all around, and something for Amazon Fire TV and Android users to look for soon, and everyone else eventually.

Phil Nickinson
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
Sonos’ unannounced video streamer reportedly uses an advertising giant’s software
Close up of Sonos logo on a Sonos Arc soundbar.

Sonos reportedly has partnered with online advertising company The Trade Desk on its as-yet unannounced (and almost certainly delayed) video streaming device, according to Janko Roettgers, who in his September 12 Lowpass newsletter cited "multiple sources with knowledge of the partnership."

The Trade Desk is a publicly traded company, currently valued at just over $50 billion, and describes itself as "the omnichannel advertising platform built for the open internet." In August, Roettgers reported that since 2019 the company has been building its own smart TV operating system to compete against Roku, Amazon, and Google. But that's something that The Trade Desk has denied, according to Digiday.

Read more
Vizio’s WatchFree+ streaming service joins the Vizio app for mobile viewing from anywhere
Vizio WatchFree+ FAST service within the Vizio mobile app.

WatchFree+, the free ad-supported streaming television (FAST) service that's available on all Vizio smart TVs, is now available to watch anywhere, thanks to its inclusion in the Vizio app for iOS and Android devices.

You don't need to own a Vizio TV to stream WatchFree+ content -- the app is free to download for anyone -- but there's a big benefit for those who use the service on a Vizio TV: the mobile version of WatchFree+ will let you pick up where you left off if you have to pause your TV-based session.

Read more
Chromecast or Google Cast? Google’s confusing wireless streaming tech explained
Chromecast icon seen on a smartphone screen.

In August 2024, Google debuted a new device called Google TV Streamer -- its first set-top box media streamer. At the same time, the company announced that it would no longer sell the Streamer's predecessor (Google Chromecast With Google TV). Chromecast, as a brand and as a product, was officially discontinued.

However, Chromecast (the technology) is still alive and well; it lives on under a new (though also old) name: Google Cast.

Read more