Amazon's Fire TV Stick 4K hits lowest price ever ahead of Black Friday
There may be no Black Friday label put on this deal, but it sure feels like a Black Friday deal! Right now, the Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K has dropped to a brand-new best price: it’s now available for $22 on Amazon, a whopping 56 percent off its usual $50 price.
The Fire TV Stick 4K brings top-quality streaming to any TV that supports HDMI input. Even if you already own a smart TV, the Fire OS that runs Fire TV Sticks might be better than what you have — it’s great for keeping your apps and media organized and accessing tons of streaming services, including hundreds of thousands of free movies and TV episodes, plus Fire TV channels, Pluto TV, Tubi, and more.
Not only can you stream video in 4K quality, but it also supports Dolby Vision, HDR10+, and Dolby Atmos, delivering an at-home experience that’s as close as possible to what you get in theaters.
And it’s not just video streaming. You can also stream video games, and you’re even able to play full-blown Xbox games without a console if you have a subscription to Xbox Game Pass Ultimate.
The Fire TV Stick 4K also comes with an Alexa Voice Remote, so you can just click a button and run a quick search, launch apps, and control content with your voice.
If the processor speed and 8GB of storage on the Fire TV Stick 4K isn’t enough for you, you can spend a few more bucks for the Fire TV Stick 4K Max (was $60, now $33) or shell out for the bigger and badder Fire TV Cube (was $140, now $100).
Otherwise, it’s hard to pass up the Fire TV Stick 4K for just $22 on Amazon. This is almost impulse buy levels of cheap, and even if you don’t need one, your family members would probably love one!
Amazon’s Fire TV Stick 4K is a whopping 56% offBuy now on Amazon
Author: Gabriela Vatu, Contributing Writer
Gabriela has focused on tech writing for 12 years, covering news, reviews, buying guides, deals, and more. She has bylines in numerous consumer tech publications, including PCWorld, Macworld, PCMag, IGN, MakeUseOf, XDA, Android Police, and Pocket-lint.