Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking The newest addition to Foxtel’s stable of streaming services is Binge, a dedicated streaming platform that features some of Foxtel’s best movies and TV shows from HBO, FX, and more. You don’t need to have any existing Foxtel set-up to try Binge. Like Netflix and Stan, all you need is a compatible device (most smartphones, tablets, and browsers will do the trick) and a subscription. Plans start at $10 per month for one device with standard definition streaming with no lock-in contract or strings attached. There’s also a two-week free trial if you’re not utterly convinced. Lastly, one significant omission from Binge is 4K viewing. Competitors Netflix and Stan offer 4K at their top tier, but Binge only provides high definition. Binge also has no plans to include 4K support, which is a bit of a drag. Our best guess is that Foxtel wants to keep 4K exclusive to the iQ4 box to maintain some sort of illusion that iQ4 is the primo option.
Binge TV shows: The best series streaming on BingeBinge Movies: The best films you can stream on BingeBinge vs Foxtel Now: How does Binge compare with Foxtel Now?Binge vs Netflix: Does Binge hold its weight against streaming’s best?
Whatever Foxtel is paying the good people at Streamotion, they need to double it. Both Binge and Kayo are the best streaming apps to come out of Foxtel. In particular, Kayo is a genuinely innovative sports streaming platform with clever features you won’t find on any other platform in Australia. It features over fifty sports, live and on-demand, SplitView for viewing up to four events at once, 20-minute highlight reels with Kayo Mini, stats and scoreboards, and key moments tagged on the playback bar. There’s even a spoiler-free view if you want to dodge any scores before catching the game. It’s available on smartphones, tablets, most browsers, Samsung and Android smart TV, Apple TV, Telstra TV, and Chromecast. As a niche service, Kayo is a little more expensive than Binge, costing between $25 (1 stream) and $35 (3 streams) per month and comes with a 7-day free trial. Like Binge, there’s no 4K available on Kayo, but other than that, you should be getting the same experience, provided your internet speed is up to snuff. Out of all the services listed, Foxtel Go is the most simple to explain. Foxtel iQ subscribers get a Foxtel Go login that allows them to stream most of the content included in their pay-TV plan on the go. All you need to do is download the Foxtel Go app on Android or iOS, or visit the Foxtel website in Safari or Chrome, and log in with your Foxtel ID details. Foxtel Go isn’t a standalone streaming service, more of an alternative way to access your traditional Foxtel subscription. There are no additional charges past what you already pay for your regular Foxtel subscription. Unlike Foxtel Go, Foxtel Now is an actual streaming service created to compete with Netflix and Stan without the same affordable price or reliability. Foxtel Now infamously tanked at crucial moments throughout the history of the service’s most popular show, Game of Thrones. The experience was so bad that it was immortalised by the massive spike in ‘Cancel Foxtel Now’ searches the day after Game of Thrones’ last episode aired. But for some reason, Foxtel just won’t quit on Now, even after releasing two comparatively well-received streaming services with Binge and Kayo. We’re not privy to the inner workings over at Fox, but the company continues to make bizarre, ill-informed decisions around the rollout and co-existence of Binge, Kayo, and Foxtel Now. Like removing Binge and Kayo from the Foxtel Now streaming box. These three services are all owned by the same company. They work out of the same office. But you’d be forgiven if you assumed they were bitter streaming rivals trying to undercut each other. Whatever is happening behind-the-scenes, you’re better off paying for Binge and Kayo rather than Foxtel Now, in our opinion. Foxtel Now’s channel packs start at $25 per month, but that’s just the basics. You can spend over $100 per month if you decide you want sports, lifestyle, kids content, and more. It’s essentially the same premium pricing model as Foxtel, without the PVR set-top box included. If you absolutely must, there’s a ten-day free trial of Foxtel Now that will cost you nada, which is precisely what the service is worth. If you’re a Telstra customer, you’ve got the option to take a 1-month trial of Foxtel Now’s most premium package until 30 June 2021, but Telstra customers can also bundle three free months of Binge.