APP COMRADE

Samsung TV / videos / DYNOXE

REVIEW

Dynoxe is a one-developer Tizen video app with almost nothing to go on.

An April 2026 submission from independent developer Arun Konda, listed under Samsung's videos category with no screenshots, no description, and no public footprint. There is very little here to evaluate, and that itself is the review.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 2 MIN READ

Samsung TV

Dynoxe

ARUN KONDA

OUR SCORE

4.5

SAMSUNG TV

★ —

PRICE

Free

Dynoxe arrived on the Samsung Tizen store in April 2026 from an independent developer named Arun Konda, filed under the videos category with the minimum metadata Samsung’s submission flow accepts. The icon is there. Nothing else is. No screenshots, no description, no support page, no press, no user reviews.

That blankness is the whole story. Samsung’s TV store is a long-tail catalogue with hundreds of submissions in any given month, and the apps that get installed are the ones that tell a viewer what they are in the time it takes to scroll past them. Dynoxe currently does not. A 2026 store listing without screenshots reads, to most TV owners, the same way a restaurant with no menu in the window reads — you keep walking.

There is a charitable reading. Some indie Tizen developers ship the binary first and fill in the metadata across subsequent updates, and Dynoxe was published only weeks ago. The April release date and a mid-April refresh suggest the developer is still iterating. The honest call right now is to wait and see what shows up in the next update, then revisit. Until then, this is a listing rather than a product anyone outside the developer’s circle has reason to install.

An empty store listing in 2026 is not modesty. It is a reason for a Samsung TV owner to keep scrolling.

FEATURES

Dynoxe is filed under Samsung's "videos" category on Tizen, free to install, with no in-app purchase metadata declared. The Samsung store listing carries an icon and nothing else: no screenshots, no long description, no short description, no website, no support URL, no third-party coverage anywhere on the open web.

What the app actually does on launch is undocumented. There is no public indication of which video sources it pulls from, whether it is a personal media player, a niche streaming front-end, a regional channel aggregator, or a placeholder build. The developer name — Arun Konda — does not match a known publishing studio or a widely distributed app catalogue.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The app exists in the Samsung TV store, which is a real bar to clear. Tizen's submission and review queue is slow, and individual developers shipping a working binary onto every modern Samsung set is not nothing.

The icon is clean and reads at TV viewing distance. That is the entire positive observation available from outside the app.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

An empty listing is a problem in 2026. A Samsung TV viewer browsing the store has no way to decide whether to install Dynoxe — there is no screenshot of the UI, no sentence describing what plays inside, no genre or audience signal. The most valuable thing the developer could do this week is paste two paragraphs of plain English into the description field and upload three screenshots.

Without a description or any user reviews to triangulate against, there is also no way to evaluate stability, content licensing, regional availability, or update cadence. That uncertainty is the practical reason most Samsung TV owners will skip past it.

CONCLUSION

Dynoxe is the kind of long-tail Tizen submission that needs a basic store listing before it can earn an honest evaluation. Until the developer adds screenshots and a description, install only if you already know what it does. Revisit after the next update — if metadata appears, this score is open to revision upward.