APP COMRADE

Samsung TV / videos / TVALLSTREAM

REVIEW

Tvallstream is a generic-named Tizen streamer with nothing on the box.

A free March 2026 Samsung TV channel from a single-name developer, listed under Videos with no description, no screenshots, and no rating yet.

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

Samsung TV

Tvallstream

ABILIO RODRIGUES

OUR SCORE

6.2

SAMSUNG TV

★ —

PRICE

Free

Tvallstream is, on the Samsung TV store, almost entirely a blank rectangle. A 512-pixel icon, a one-word name, a single-line developer credit, a release date in late March 2026, and the word “Videos.” That is the entire pitch. No description, no short description, no screenshots, no featured banner, and on Tizen no public rating or review count either.

That is unusual even by the standards of Samsung’s TV App Store, which carries plenty of niche channels with thin listings. Most fill out at least a sentence of marketing copy and a screenshot or two. Tvallstream has not. The name parses as “TV all stream,” which is the standard naming pattern for the small generic-named IPTV launchers that have appeared on every TV platform over the last few years — channels that aggregate many live streams from many sources behind a single tile.

App Comrade has not been able to verify what Tvallstream actually plays, where its content comes from, or whether it is still working week-to-week on a real Samsung set. The Tizen listing gives a prospective viewer no answer to any of those questions, and the only honest review of a channel like this in 2026 is to flag exactly that gap and let the reader decide.

The Samsung listing carries a name, an icon, and a category. Everything else a viewer would want to know is missing.

FEATURES

The Samsung TV listing for Tvallstream gives a viewer almost nothing to go on. The app is free, sits in the Videos category, was released on 25 March 2026, and was last refreshed on 15 April 2026. The developer is credited as "abilio rodrigues" — a single-person attribution with no studio, publisher, or recognisable brand behind it.

Samsung's store has not surfaced a description, a short description, a featured banner, or any screenshots for this channel. The Tizen listing is, in other words, almost entirely blank. There is no rating yet and no review count, which on Tizen is the norm — Samsung's TV store does not expose user-review aggregates the way Google Play does — but it means a prospective viewer has no community signal either.

The name itself is the only real clue. "Tvallstream" parses as "TV all stream," which on Tizen is the standard naming pattern for grey-zone IPTV aggregators: a channel that bundles many live TV streams from many sources behind a single launcher, without the licensing arrangements that Pluto TV, Tubi, or Samsung TV Plus negotiate with broadcasters. App Comrade cannot verify what Tvallstream actually streams without testing it on a Samsung set, and Samsung has not put any of that information on the listing.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The single concrete win is that the channel exists, is free, and was published recently enough to suggest the developer is still active — the 15 April refresh is six weeks after the 25 March release, which is faster than most one-person Tizen apps see in a year.

Samsung's certification process did approve it, which means the channel meets the platform's baseline technical requirements: a 512-pixel icon, a working entry point, and whatever DRM and playback conformance Tizen demands at submission. For a solo developer with no studio behind them, getting through Samsung's TV App Store at all is non-trivial.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

The empty listing is the problem. A Samsung TV owner browsing the Videos shelf cannot tell what Tvallstream streams, where its catalogue comes from, who licenses the content, or whether it works at all. Every comparable free streamer on Tizen — Pluto TV, Tubi, Plex, Samsung TV Plus, Rakuten TV — fills out a description, a featured image, and a screenshot reel. Tvallstream has none of those. That's a missed step the developer can fix in a single store-console update, and until it happens the channel is asking viewers to install something sight-unseen.

Generic-named all-content streamers on Tizen, Roku, and Fire TV have a documented pattern: they bundle linear IPTV feeds of uncertain provenance, run for a few months, and either get pulled by the platform or quietly stop working when their upstream source goes dark. Tvallstream may turn out to be the exception, but the listing gives a viewer no way to tell the difference from outside the install.

CONCLUSION

Skip this one until the developer fills out the Samsung listing. If you specifically want a free live-TV channel on a Samsung set, Pluto TV, Tubi, and Samsung TV Plus are the licensed defaults and they put their catalogues in plain view. Tvallstream may genuinely be a competent niche IPTV launcher — but a Tizen channel with no description and no screenshots is, in 2026, an app that hasn't told a viewer it deserves the install.