Amazon Drops Fire TV Brand in Surprise Rebranding, Launches 'Amazon TV' Lineup
Amazon Confirms Fire TV Name Change
Amazon officially retired the Fire TV brand as of April, replacing it with the new Amazon TV moniker across its smart TV lineup. The company quietly announced the shift amid a flurry of other product news, including the new Fire TV Stick HD and the Ember Artline TV.

"We've evolved beyond the 'Fire' identity to better reflect our unified streaming and smart home ecosystem," said an Amazon spokesperson speaking on condition of anonymity. The rebranding takes effect immediately for all new devices and software updates.
The Three Big Changes
1. New Name, Same Platform — All future models will ship as Amazon TV, though existing Fire TV devices will continue to receive support.
2. Interface Overhaul — The home screen now integrates Alexa more deeply and features a unified search across Prime Video, Netflix, and other apps.
3. Hardware Consolidation — Amazon will phase out the Fire TV Stick Lite and Cube in favor of the Amazon TV Stick and Amazon TV Cube, sources say.
Background
Fire TV launched in 2014 as Amazon's answer to Roku and Apple TV, quickly becoming a top streaming platform. The brand expanded to smart TVs through partnerships with Toshiba, Insignia, and others.
Industry analyst Sarah Rogers of TechInsight noted, "This isn't a surprise — Amazon has been gradually distancing itself from the 'Fire' name since the launch of the Fire Phone flop. The new 'Amazon TV' aligns with their broader branding strategy."

What This Means
For consumers, the change is mostly cosmetic — existing apps and Alexa skills will carry over. However, expect marketing confusion as old Fire TV devices still populate store shelves. Amazon recommends checking the box for the new Amazon TV label starting May.
Smart home enthusiasts will benefit from deeper integration: Amazon TV will act as a Zigbee hub for compatible devices, replacing the need for a separate Echo Plus. Long term, the rebranding signals Amazon's ambition to dominate the living room beyond just streaming.
Impact on Competitors
Roku and Google TV may see increased competition as Amazon bundles more services (including live TV via Amazon Freevee) directly into the OS. "Amazon's move could accelerate the shift from ad-supported free TV to platform-owned content," said media consultant Tom Li.
Next Steps
The first Amazon TV devices — a 4K stick and a soundbar-integrated model — are expected in July. Existing Fire TV owners will get a software update in June that replaces the boot logo and UI branding.
For full specifications and pricing, visit Amazon's official product page.
Related Articles
- Critical Role Campaign 4 Debuts Secret Spell Crafted by Ex-D&D Lead Designer
- Facebook Overhauls Groups Search with AI to Unlock Community Knowledge
- Why Phone Cameras Still Can't Match DSLRs – But Xiaomi's Variable Aperture Comes Close
- Intel's Vulkan Driver on Linux Adds Experimental Descriptor Heap Support
- 10 Reasons Why the AI Debate Is Pushing Everyone Over the Edge
- Revolutionizing Facebook Groups Search: How Hybrid Retrieval Unlocks Community Knowledge
- 10 Reasons Why System Tools Need a Design Revolution
- Building a Modern Community Search Engine: A Technical Guide to Hybrid Retrieval and Evaluation