APP COMRADE

LG / entertainment / BRAZITV

REVIEW

BraziTV brings a Portuguese-first channel feed to LG webOS.

Costa Brazil Group's free webOS app aggregates Brazilian live TV and on-demand programming for the LG smart-TV market, aimed primarily at diaspora households outside Brazil.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 2 MIN READ

LG

BraziTV

COSTA BRAZIL GROUP

OUR SCORE

7.0

LG

★ 5.0

PRICE

Free

BraziTV is the kind of LG webOS install that doesn’t show up in roundups but quietly earns a spot on the home screen of the household that needs it. Costa Brazil Group’s free channel aggregates Brazilian live TV and Portuguese-language on-demand programming into a single tile grid, opens without a login, and runs in pt-BR end-to-end. For a Portuguese-speaking household sitting in front of an LG TV outside Brazil, that combination is harder to find than it should be.

The app’s value isn’t in its production polish — it’s in its existence. Diaspora TV on smart platforms tends to live in browser tabs, YouTube playlists, or sideloaded boxes; a dedicated webOS channel that surfaces novelas, news, and Brazilian music programming with one Magic Remote click solves a real problem for a real audience. The interface is plain, the catalogue is finite, and the stream stability is what it is for a category that depends on upstream feeds the developer doesn’t always control.

BraziTV doesn’t try to be more than its premise. It’s free, Portuguese-first, and aimed squarely at LG households that want Brazilian programming without standing up extra hardware. The score reflects honest tradeoffs — broad-strokes useful, narrow-tail rough — and the recommendation is straightforward: if you’re the audience, install it; if you’re not, this isn’t for you.

BraziTV is a single-purpose diaspora channel on the LG home screen — Brazilian programming in Portuguese, free, no account theatrics.

FEATURES

BraziTV is a free LG webOS channel from Costa Brazil Group that surfaces Brazilian live TV and Portuguese-language on-demand content inside the LG Content Store. The app launches into a tile-based grid sorted by category — news, novelas, sports, music, entertainment — and plays each channel in a full-screen player driven by the Magic Remote.

Navigation is Portuguese-first throughout. Category names, channel descriptions, and the player chrome all default to pt-BR, which is the right call for the audience but worth flagging if you're installing this for a family member who reads English better. Playback runs at standard HLS-style bitrates, with the usual smart-TV-app caveat that stream quality depends as much on the upstream source as on the app itself.

No login wall on first launch. The app opens straight into content, which is increasingly rare in the LG entertainment category.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The single biggest thing BraziTV gets right is being there at all. Portuguese-language programming on LG webOS is thin — most diaspora households fall back to YouTube, a browser tab, or a side-loaded Android box. A dedicated channel that opens to Brazilian content in one click is genuinely useful for the audience it's aimed at.

The Portuguese-first interface is correct for the use case, the free price removes the friction that kills most niche TV apps, and the tile-grid layout works cleanly with the Magic Remote's pointer.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

Stream reliability is the recurring soft spot for apps in this category — third-party Brazilian channel feeds vary day to day, and BraziTV inherits whatever upstream stability its sources have. Expect occasional dead channels and the standard mid-stream buffering that comes with smaller-budget IPTV-style apps.

Search and filtering inside the catalogue are basic. There's no obvious favorites list, no resume-where-you-left-off for the on-demand items, and no EPG-style schedule grid for the live channels. Discovery beyond the front-page tiles is harder than it should be.

CONCLUSION

BraziTV is a reasonable install for Portuguese-speaking households on LG TVs who want Brazilian programming without spinning up a sideloaded box or a browser. The score reflects what it is — a single-purpose diaspora channel that succeeds at being present and free, with the stream-reliability and discovery caveats common to the category. Worth a try; uninstall costs nothing.