During a special event in New York City today, Amazon’s long-rumoured Android game console came to light as Amazon Fire TV, a streaming set-top box that’s essentially a Kindle Fire for your television. Meant to compete with the likes of Apple TV, the Amazon Fire TV is exactly what it needs to be — the powerful innards of a Kindle Fire, using your HDTV as a display.
It has a quad-core CPU and a dedicated GPU, so it should be ready to handle anything the ‘Games’ tab shown in the device’s interface can throw at it.
Amazon VP Peter Larson introduced the gaming side of the Fire TV as a bonus. He pointed to the high price of consoles and general disappointment with streaming games from iDevices to Apple TV, before having Mike Frazzini from Amazon Games take the stage to talk in greater depth.
Thousands of games will be available to play next month on Amazon Fire TV, with big name developers like Ubisoft, 2K, Gameloft, EA, Sega and Double Fine on board to offer content — the same sort of content we’d see on the Kindle Fire, really.
Frazzini also introduced the $US40 Amazon controller, which is indeed the leaked console-style controller we saw last month. The controller retails for $US40, and comes bundled with Amazon coins that can be used to purchase games.
Games can also be played with the Fire TV’s remote or a custom app Amazon is releasing next month.
Games shown running on the system include a Fire TV-specific version of Minecraft, Gameloft’s free-to-play racer Asphalt 8, a Monsters Inc. runner and a third-person shooter called Sev Zero from Amazon’s own Amazon Games Studio.
The Amazon Fire TV is priced at $US99 and available today. Unfortunately, it’s only available in the US. You want some specs? You can’t handle the specs.
Size | 4.5″ x 4.5″ x 0.7″ (115 mm x 115 mm x 17.5 mm) |
Weight | 9.9 oz (281 grams) |
SOC Platform | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8064 |
Processor | Qualcomm Krait 300, quad-core to 1.7 Ghz |
GPU | Qualcomm Adreno 320 |
Storage | 8 GB internal |
Memory | 2 GB LPDDR2 @ 533 MHZ |
Wi-Fi Connectivity | Dual-band, dual-antenna Wi-Fi (MIMO) for faster streaming and fewer dropped connections than standard Wi-Fi. Supports public and private Wi-Fi networks that use the 802.11a/b/g/n standard with support for WEP, WPA and WPA2 security using password authentication |
Bluetooth | Bluetooth 4.0 with support for the following profiles: HID, HFP 1.6, SPP |
Cloud Storage | Free cloud storage for all Amazon content |
Ports |
5.5 mm DC Jack
Type A HDMI 1.4b output, w/HDCP Optical Audio (TOSLINK) 10/100 Ethernet USB 2.0 Type A |
Audio | Support for Dolby Digital Plus, 5.1 surround sound, 2ch Stereo and HDMI audio pass through up to 7.1 |
Content Formats Supported |
Video: H.263, H.264, MPEG4-SP, VC1
Audio: AAC, AC-3, E-AC-3, HE-A, PCM, MP3 Photo: JPG, PNG |
Output Resolution Supported | 720p and 1080p up to 60fps |
System Requirements | High-definition television, HDMI cable |
TV Compatibility | Compatible with high-definition TVs with HDMI capable of 1080p or 720p at 60/50Hz, including popular models from these manufacturers: Hitachi, JVC, LG, Mitsubishi, NEC, Panasonic, Philips, Pioneer, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, Toshiba, Vizio, Westinghouse |
Warranty and Service | 1-year Limited Warranty and service included. Use of Fire TV is subject to the terms found here. |
Regional Support | Certain services may not be available outside the U.S. |
Included in the Box |
Amazon Fire TV
Amazon Fire TV remote 2 AAA batteries Power Adaptor Quick Start Guide |
Comments
13 responses to “Meet Amazon Fire TV, A Video-Streaming Android Gaming Mini-Console”
So spec wise it’s a Nexus 7 2013 in a box.
sooooo can the DNS setting be adjusted on the unit or will it need to be done at a router level?
This. I wanted to jump onto the Minix X7 but I’m still iffy after the issues I had with the G4. If I can stream my Netflix with no issues then I’m definitely gonna try get my hands on this
This is the all important question.
And can Amazon later disable this remotely if Foxtel throws a massive tantrum? Also a concern with these specialised boxen.
So depressing that Double Helix is now working on games for this thing instead of K.I .
I’m fine with my apple tv, running through my xbox one. Games and tv all in one. Plus I don’t give a shit about playing games on this thing.
Cool story bro.
This device is of interest to us non-slaves of the decadent Apple empire, however.
Only 100mbit ethernet is pretty lame, I must say.
More than enough for a device like that, it’s not like it’s going to be hosting files.
I am referring to streaming local content.
What local content do you have that requires more then 100Mb?
So how’s that Ouya doing?
Dead.