Discovery network browsing
Discovery GO brings Discovery family programming into a mobile layout with channel rows, show cards, episode lists, and themed collections. The home and shows screens surface series such as disaster, history, food, home, and survival programming so viewers can browse by network or title.
This setup is useful for users who follow several Discovery brands and want one app for quick browsing. The interface also includes tabs for home, shows, watch live, search, and account areas, making it easier to jump between entertainment discovery and account controls.
Episodes, live TV, and search
The app presents new episodes, trending programs, and a watch-live section with current and upcoming content. Search lets viewers look for shows, episodes, and movie-style entries without scrolling through every category.
Live and on-demand viewing may depend on regional availability and TV provider access. Users who mainly want casual browsing can still review show pages and schedules, while full playback may require linking a supported provider.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.
Provider linking and account controls
Discovery GO includes a provider-linking prompt that explains access to thousands of episodes across the Discovery family of networks. The account area also shows entries for My List, Help, About, and push notification controls.
Provider linking is important for viewers who want unlocked playback, but it should be handled with the user's own TV subscription details. The visible account tools also give users a place to manage saved content and app support options.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.
Streaming settings and device behavior
Android settings show notifications, phone, mobile data, battery, storage, picture-in-picture, and app information for this build. The package also declares internet, network state, Wi-Fi state, advertising identifiers, wake-lock, boot, foreground service, and push messaging capabilities.
These settings matter for a video app because streaming can use data, battery, and background services. Users should review notification, data saver, storage, and picture-in-picture preferences before relying on the app for longer viewing sessions.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.