While most TV brands favour their own proprietary operating systems, Whale TV has quietly grown in popularity among manufacturers.
It has recently signed a clutch of new partners and bolted Boosteroid cloud gaming onto its 4K models, which could change the living room playbook quite a bit.
We’ve seen brands such as Aiwa, Blaupunkt, EFL, ONVO, and JVC joining the Whale OS 10 family recently, along with Moka stepping in as a turnkey ODM partner (that should speed up production).
This matters because more manufacturers mean more choice for buyers, and more frequent firmware updates for users who actually care about fresh features.
Gaming without the heavy kit
With Whale TV adding Boosteroid to its 4K TV lineup, compatible TV sets can stream PC‑grade games at up to 4K and 120 FPS on supported models. No bulky console. No expensive GPU. Just plug in, sign up, and play.
Of course, the performance of cloud gaming will vary a lot depending on factors like internet speeds and local Wi-Fi interference; yet when conditions align, the experience should feel slick.
Casual players should appreciate the simplicity, and while hardcore players might still prefer a dedicated rig, this closes the gap somewhat.
This move strengthens Whale TV as an independent OS that shares revenue with OEMs while keeping the user experience front and centre. Scale helps here: platforms with millions of active devices attract more services, creating a virtuous circle for both brands and buyers.
If you’ve already got a set running Whale TV software, check your app store for Boosteroid and confirm your model supports 4K, 120 FPS streaming. If you’re shopping and want to go for a Whale TV-powered set, look for Whale OS 10 badges on the packaging.
