Amazonjust cut their Fire TV Stick 4K from $50 to $25 on Best Buy, so this might just be the perfect time for you to grab a couple of extra ones for bedrooms or guest rooms, maybe snazz it up a little. I’ve been testing streaming devices for a while now, and getting 4K with Dolby Vision for twenty-five bucks is actually wild.
The funny thing is they barely advertise these sales anymore - just quietly slash prices and watch them disappear. This particular model came out last year with a decent speed bump over the old 2018 version, plus they finally added Wi-Fi 6 support, which makes a bigger difference than you’d expect.
The New Amazon 4K Fire Stick - What Changed?
I also love how smooth everything feels compared to the older Fire TV devices I’ve used. Menu navigation doesn’t have that slight lag where you click something and wait for it to register. Apps open faster, switching between services is seamless, and 4K content starts playing without the usual buffering dance.
The 1.7GHz MediaTek processor paired with 1GB of RAM sounds underwhelming on paper, but it handles streaming just fine. I can bounce between YouTube, Netflix, Disney+, and Amazon Prime without apps crashing or freezing up. The 8GB storage gets tight if you install everything available, but most people stick to five or six main services anyway.
To reiterate, 4K content looks genuinely impressive on this thing. Dolby Vision makes a noticeable difference on compatible TVs - colors pop more, darker scenes have actual detail instead of looking like black soup. HDR10+ support covers most streaming services that don’t use Dolby Vision.
Audio handling is solid too. Dolby Atmos passes through properly if you’ve got a sound system that supports it. Even basic TV speakers sound cleaner without any weird audio sync issues.
Living with Fire OS
The interface aggressively pushes Amazon content, which gets old fast if you primarily use other services. Your home screen will always prioritizePrime Video recommendations, and you have to dig through settings to make other apps more prominent. It’s not broken, just obviously biased toward Amazon’s stuff.
The AI search improved a lot though. Ask for “comedies from the 90s” and it’ll actually pull results from multiple services instead of just showing Amazon’s catalog. Still puts Prime content first, but at least acknowledges that Netflix and Hulu exist.
App performance is snappy enough that switching between services doesn’t feel like a chore. The old Fire TV would take forever to load certain apps, but this one opens everything quickly without much waiting around.
Cloud Gaming Experiments
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate streaming works better than expected for a $25 device. You need decent internet and a compatible controller, but being able to play console games on any TV is pretty cool. There’s definitely input lag compared to local gaming, but it’s playable for most games that aren’t super competitive.
Amazon Luna works too, though their game library is pretty limited compared to Game Pass. The device gets warm during long gaming sessions but doesn’t crash or slow down noticeably.
Don’t expect this to replace a real gaming console, but for trying out cloud services or casual gaming, it’s surprisingly capable.
Smart Home Integration
The Alexa integration goes beyond just content search. You can control lights, check doorbell cameras, adjust temperature, all through voice commands while watching TV. If you already use Echo devices, having another Alexa endpoint in the living room feels natural.
Setup automatically recognizes whatever smart home devices Alexa already controls, so there’s no additional configuration needed. Just works with your existing setup.
Amazon makes money on content sales and subscriptions, not hardware. Getting these devices into more homes means more people buying movies, renting shows, and subscribing to Prime. The $25 price is probably close to their actual manufacturing cost.
For buyers, this removes the usual hesitation about upgrading streaming devices, so I guess this is a win-win for everyone involved. If you’ve been using an older streaming device or dealing with a slow smart TV interface, this upgrade gives you better performance and features at half the price. Hard to go wrong at $25.