Samsung TV / sports / MEGAPURE YOGA
REVIEW
MegaPure Yoga turns the Samsung TV into a quiet, no-login mat companion.
A free Tizen yoga channel from Radiance with no account wall, no subscription, and a small but honestly framed video library — useful if you want a clean third screen at the front of the mat.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
MegaPure Yoga is the kind of TV channel that earns its keep by getting out of the way. There’s no sign-in screen, no free-trial countdown, no upgrade banner pinned to the home grid. You launch it from the Samsung Tizen app row, the catalogue loads, you press play. For a category that has spent the last five years training viewers to expect a credit-card field before the first downward dog, that absence is the entire pitch.
The app is small. Radiance — a relatively new publisher on the Tizen store — shipped MegaPure in March 2026 with a session library in the low dozens and hasn’t visibly expanded it in the two months since. The instructor pool is modest, the production is clean rather than cinematic, and the visual identity is unobtrusive. None of that is a problem for the use case the app actually serves: a second yoga screen for households that already pay for Glo or Yoga Studio on a phone, or a primary one for casual practitioners who want a free option on the biggest screen in the house without surrendering an email address to get it.
MegaPure Yoga isn’t trying to be Glo or Down Dog. It’s a launcher that pipes a curated bench of sessions onto the largest screen in the room, and on a Samsung TV it does that job with surprisingly little fuss.
MegaPure Yoga isn't trying to be Glo or Down Dog. It's a launcher that pipes a curated bench of sessions onto the largest screen in the room.
FEATURES
MegaPure Yoga is a free Tizen TV channel published by Radiance in March 2026. It opens directly to a grid of yoga sessions sorted by length and style — no sign-up, no email gate, no paywall, no subscription tier. The remote-driven layout is built for D-pad navigation, with large thumbnails, a centred Now Playing pane, and a simple back-button hierarchy.
The catalogue is organised around the obvious axes: morning flow, evening wind-down, beginner foundations, hip openers, back-pain sequences, and a handful of breathing-focused practices. Session lengths cluster in the 10-to-30-minute band, which is the right range for TV consumption — long enough to be a practice, short enough to commit to without checking the clock.
Playback is straightforward. Standard pause, rewind, and fast-forward via the Samsung remote, with on-screen pose names timed to the instructor's cues. No download mode, no offline cache, no Bixby integration, no profile system. There's nothing here that ties the app to a specific account or tracks your history across sessions — open it, pick a video, follow along.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The no-friction posture is the win. Most TV yoga apps demand a login before the first asana, and a meaningful slice of them push a free-trial subscription on top. MegaPure skips both. You install it from the Samsung store, you open it, you stretch. That alone earns it a place on a "second yoga channel" shortlist for anyone who already pays for Glo or Yoga Studio elsewhere and just wants a backup that loads instantly.
The on-screen pose labels are a small but real touch — knowing the Sanskrit name and the cue as it lands is more useful on a TV than on a phone, because the typography is large enough to actually read from the mat. The audio mix is also better than most free yoga channels: the instructor's voice sits forward, the music underneath is low and unobtrusive, and there's no jarring intro-bumper sting before each session.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The library is the obvious ceiling. The session count is in the low dozens rather than the hundreds, the instructor roster is small, and there's no clear update cadence published anywhere — the app launched in March 2026 and the catalogue hasn't visibly grown since. If you practice five days a week, you'll see the same morning flow on rotation within a month.
Discovery is also thin. There's no search, no favourites list, no resume-where-you-left-off, and no recommendation logic — every visit starts from the same grid in the same order. A two-line filter (style, length) would close most of the gap without breaking the no-account model. The lack of any progress tracking is fine for casual use but rules MegaPure out for anyone building a structured practice.
CONCLUSION
Install MegaPure Yoga if you want a free, login-free yoga channel as a backup on a Samsung TV — for the guest room, a holiday rental, or as a second option alongside a paid app. It won't replace Glo or Down Dog, and it isn't trying to. Watch for whether Radiance grows the library through 2026; if the catalogue doubles and a search field arrives, the score goes up. For now, it's a calm, honest, no-friction utility worth a spot on the home row.