Review: Chromecast With Google TV Greatly Simplifies the Streaming World

Access all your viewing options in one place, by remote or by voice

Chromecast with Google TV device and remote, sitting on a table. Our review praises the organization the service brings to streaming

Chromecast with Google TV will make your streaming nights easier

By Kirk Miller

Nota bene: If you buy through the links in this article, we may earn a small share of the profits.

My smart TV isn’t just dumb. It’s malicious.

I’ve been using a 2019 model of a top-5 (or maybe top-3) brand of flatscreen for a little over a year. On its own, the set has connection issues — both wired and wireless — and the interface and OS feel dated. Outside of Netflix, no apps run well. 

My streaming services work better when I go through my Xbox One, but that still features more of a game-centric interaction and forces me to either use an awkward controller to poke around my different apps, or a remote that doesn’t seem to work unless I’m standing less than two feet away. 

Recently, I connected my TV with a Roku Express, hoping that a simple $30 HDMI plug-in device would allow me to interface with all my streaming apps at once. Instead, some of those apps froze constantly (looking at you, HBO Max) and the device itself hijacked my TV; I’d press a setting for my DVR and the Roku would randomly take over and not allow me access back to my regular cable TV unless I literally unplugged the device. 

For someone who watches TV across a dozen services and apps, I needed something that was simple to use, well organized and remembered me and my interests. 

Google TV will suggest viewing picks for you across different apps and services
Google

Ergo, I’ve spent a few weeks with Google’s Chromecast with Google TV, and I love it. It’s a $50 device that hangs a bit awkwardly in back of my TV from a small cord attached to an HDMI port. Paired with a nine-button remote that also provides access to Google Assistant, this device is thankfully about 90% of the solution I wanted for accessing my streaming services. It does a few other things that are less important and not quite as good — mainly personal recommendations — but the idea here is, can I get to my Hulu/Netflix/HBO Max/Prime Video/YouTube quickly and intuitively from one screen using one remote? 

Setting up:

While ostensibly plug-and-play, setting up Chromecast, downloading and signing into various streaming apps and then waiting for a system update required about 30 minutes of time.

The specs: 

What works:

What kind of works:

What needs work:

Note: There were several features I didn’t try, including the Library Tab (which shows movies and shows via Google services and new DVR recordings from YouTube TV). I also didn’t try said live TV, which requires a YouTube TV subscription — which, for cord cutters, is apparently pretty good. I also didn’t try to pair Chromecast with Nest or any other smart devices, and I didn’t set it up to control my TV’s power or work with my connected Sonos speakers, because I’m legitimately afraid to give one remote or service all my tech access.

What others are saying:

(9.2/10) If you subscribe to YouTube TV or are a fan of Google Assistant, however, the Chromecast with Google TV is a great pick. It integrates really well with other Google services like Photos, and support for nearly all major streaming apps means it should be fine no matter what you want to watch. — CNET

(4/5) The Chromecast with Google TV is about the same price as the Roku and Amazon Fire TV Sticks on the market, but … it’s the things only Google can bring that make this one of the best smart streaming devices. — Tom’s Guide

(4.5/5) The Chromecast with Google TV doesn’t reinvent the wheel for streaming devices, but it does offer a convenient, easy-to-use and fully featured option for people who don’t want to spend more than they have to on the latest streaming hardware. — TechRadar

What we’re saying: 

Being able to quickly flip from Sex Education on Netflix to Invincible on Prime Video to whatever’s on Hulu or even YouTube without picking up multiple remotes or having one device hijack another made Chromecast worth the $50.

If I had truly cut the cord, this would be an ideal way to keep my watching habits organized. But as someone who still uses regular cable TV and a DVR, this is more about condensing my machinery as opposed to having an all-in-one solution. 

I’m hoping a few more weeks with the Chromecast — and a little more interaction on my part — will improve the recommendations from Google TV. Other than that, however, this is an ideal device for when your smart TV gets mad about handling anything beyond linear programming. 

Where to buy: Chromecast with Google TV is available now for $50 from most retailers.

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