Samsung TV / videos / CTC+
REVIEW
CTC+ brings a Paraguayan broadcaster to the Samsung TV home screen.
The Tizen channel is Cable Televisora Color's streaming surface — a regional Latin American broadcaster pushing its catalogue onto Samsung TVs through a thin app shell.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 2 MIN READ
CTC+
CABLE TELEVISORA COLOR S.A
OUR SCORE
6.4
SAMSUNG TV
★ —
PRICE
Free
CTC+ is the Samsung TV channel from Cable Televisora Color S.A, a Paraguayan broadcasting group operating out of Asunción. It landed on the Tizen Store in late March 2026, free to download, in the videos category — a regional broadcaster taking the same distribution route a hundred other national networks have taken before it.
The Samsung listing is sparse. No description, no screenshots in the public store record, no rating data — Tizen doesn’t surface review counts the way Google Play does, and the developer has not published a long-form store description that would let an unfamiliar viewer understand what’s inside before installing. What’s verifiable is the publisher: Cable Televisora Color is a real operator with a long history in Paraguayan television, and the 2026 release date suggests an active build rather than an abandoned port.
CTC+ is, in other words, the kind of app this review can describe but not test. The value to a Paraguayan household is obvious — a fixed home-row icon instead of a browser detour. The value to anyone else is harder to argue from the listing alone, and the listing is what the store offers.
CTC+ is a single-broadcaster app — its value is the catalogue behind it, not the Tizen client wrapping it.
FEATURES
CTC+ is the Tizen channel published by Cable Televisora Color S.A, the Paraguayan broadcasting group based in Asunción. The Samsung TV build is a free download in the videos category of the Tizen Store and arrived in late March 2026.
The app surface, like most single-broadcaster channels on Tizen, is a navigation shell around the operator's own video infrastructure — a live-feed entry point, a catalogue of on-demand titles produced or licensed by the network, and the standard remote-driven menu structure Samsung apps share.
Samsung does not publish ratings data for Tizen channels and Cable Televisora Color has not posted a store description, so feature-level specifics about device tier support, account requirements, or on-demand depth aren't verifiable from the listing alone.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The win is presence. A regional Latin American broadcaster getting a first-party channel on Samsung's TV platform is the kind of distribution move that matters more for the audience than for the technology — viewers in Paraguay and the diaspora can pin CTC+ to a Samsung home row instead of routing through a browser or a phone-cast.
The 2026 release date suggests this is a current build rather than a legacy port, which is more than several Latin American broadcaster channels on Tizen can claim.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The store listing is bare. No description, no screenshots, no rating data — a viewer browsing the Tizen Store has nothing to evaluate before installing, and that's the developer's call, not Samsung's. A short paragraph describing what's behind the login wall would meaningfully change the install decision for anyone outside the immediate Paraguayan audience.
Single-broadcaster channels also live or die on the breadth of their catalogue and the stability of their live stream, neither of which the Tizen surface controls. If CTC+'s back-end has gaps, the Samsung app inherits them.
CONCLUSION
CTC+ serves the audience it's built for — viewers who already watch Cable Televisora Color's networks and want a fixed icon on the Samsung home screen instead of a browser tab. For anyone outside that audience, there's nothing in the listing to recommend a download. Watch for whether the developer adds a real store description and screenshots; that's the cheapest fix and the one that would most change how this channel reads to a casual browser.