Google Play / entertainment / QUEUE - FIND MOVIES & SHOWS
REVIEW
Queue is a quieter answer to the question of what to watch tonight.
An Android-first watch-discovery app that aggregates Netflix, Prime, Disney+, Hulu, Max, Apple TV+ and the long tail into a single list. Reelgood with less noise; JustWatch with more taste.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
Queue - Find Movies & Shows
WATCH QUEUE, INC.
OUR SCORE
7.4
GOOGLE PLAY
★ 2.7
PRICE
Free
Queue lives in the gap between five streaming apps and the thirty minutes you spend deciding which one to open. Its pitch is small and honest: stop tab-switching between Netflix, Prime, Disney+, Max and Apple TV+ to find one film you’ll actually finish. Tell the app which services you pay for, build a watchlist, and let the catalogue filter itself to what you can stream tonight without another credit-card prompt.
That problem isn’t new — Reelgood and JustWatch have been at it for years — but Queue’s read on the category is calmer. There are no affiliate “rent for $4.99” pushes shoving you toward Apple’s storefront. There are fewer carousels. The home screen shows your queue and what’s new on the services you already have, and that’s mostly it. For an app whose only job is reducing decision fatigue, that restraint reads as confidence.
It’s not a perfect product. The recommendation engine is generic until you’ve rated thirty things, the editorial rail is descriptive rather than opinionated, and international coverage is patchier than the US-first marketing suggests. But the core promise lands: Queue makes the streaming stack feel like one library instead of five separate apps you keep forgetting the password to. For an Android household paying $60 a month across services and still doom-scrolling Netflix at 9pm, that’s a worthwhile install.
Queue's pitch is small and honest: stop tab-switching between five streaming apps to find one film you'll actually finish.
FEATURES
Queue is a streaming-discovery and watchlist app. You tell it which services you subscribe to — Netflix, Prime Video, Disney+, Hulu, Max, Apple TV+, Paramount+, Peacock, plus the free-with-ads tier (Tubi, Pluto, Freevee) — and it filters every search, recommendation, and trending list down to what you can actually watch tonight without opening another paywall.
The core flow is a single tappable queue: add a film or series, see where it streams, dismiss anything that's left every service you pay for. Deep links into the Netflix, Prime, and Disney+ apps work reliably on Android; on the few services where the deep link fails, Queue falls back to a web URL.
Discovery is handled with three rails: a personalised home feed seeded from your watchlist and ratings, an editorial "Now Streaming" rail that highlights this week's notable arrivals, and a trending-by-platform list pulled from public telemetry. Filtering supports the usual cuts — genre, decade, runtime, IMDb / Rotten Tomatoes thresholds, and "only on services I have." Notifications fire when a watchlist title arrives on a service you subscribe to, or when it's about to expire.
Free with light banner ads. A small annual upgrade removes the ads and unlocks expiry-date alerts further out.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The service-filter is the whole product, and it works. Tell Queue you have Netflix and Max and the rest of the catalogue vanishes — no more clicking through a JustWatch result only to learn the film moved to Paramount+ last month. That single piece of friction-removal is worth installing the app for.
The interface is calmer than the competition. Reelgood loads heavy with carousels and affiliate links; JustWatch leans hard into "rent or buy" prompts because that's where its revenue lives. Queue keeps the surface quiet — your queue, what's new, what's leaving — and lets the catalogue do the talking.
Watchlist sync across phone and tablet is reliable. The "leaving in 14 days" alert has saved more than one film from rolling off Max before we got to it.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Coverage outside the US is partial. Queue knows about the major UK and Canadian services but misses regional players (BFI Player, Crave's tier structure, Stan in Australia) — if you're outside the US you'll occasionally hit a title that says "not available on your services" when it actually is on a service Queue doesn't track yet.
Editorial is thin. The "Now Streaming" rail is a list, not a recommendation; there's no writing, no curation voice, no "this small Mubi pickup is worth your Tuesday." JustWatch's weakness is the same, but Queue had the chance to differentiate here and didn't.
And the recommendation engine takes a while to warm up. The first two weeks of the personalised feed lean heavily on whatever's trending; only after twenty or thirty ratings does it start surfacing things you wouldn't have found yourself.
CONCLUSION
Install Queue if you pay for three or more streaming services and waste real time on the "what's on tonight" question. It won't fix the streaming industry's catalogue fragmentation, but it will make your subscription stack feel like one library instead of five. If you live deep inside Letterboxd already, you won't need it. For everyone else, the week-long trial costs nothing and the friction it removes is real.