Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Google’s new Chromecast is cheaper, tops out at HD resolution

Google, as had been rumored, today announced a newer, cheaper Chromecast with Google TV, and one that tops out at HD resolution and does not support better 4K UHD resolution.

The new $30 dongle looks and acts just like the $50 model, only this one is limited to 1080p and 60 frames per second. It still supports HDR, however, that’s limited to HDR10, HDR10+ and HLG, and it lacks Dolby Vision.

Chromecast with Google TV
Caleb Denison/Digital Trends

Otherwise, you’re looking at the exact same device we’ve been enjoying for a couple years now. Same remote. Same operating system. Same Google smarts.

Recommended Videos

The question, then, is why have a limited device like this when just about every new television sold today is going to have a 4K panel? The simplest answer is (as always) that it almost certainly comes down to money. Both Roku and Amazon Fire TV — the two biggest players in the TV dongle space — have more than one device that comes in at the sub-$50 price point. Google didn’t, until today.

But Roku gets you a 4K dongle for $40 in the . And while the retails at $50, it’s also not uncommon to see it drop below that price. All that said, it at least gets Google into the conversation. And it’s not like there aren’t any 1080p televisions out there. So this is a perfectly fine way to save $20 to make one of those sets a little better, or to augment a dumb TV in a spare room, perhaps.

It’s also available in just the single “Snow” off-white color. And to sweeten the deal, you’ll get six months free of Peacock Premium.

Chromecast with Google TV Now in HD or 4K
Phil Nickinson
Section Editor, Audio/Video
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
The Google TV Streamer added one feature that all such devices need
The rear of the Google TV Streamer device.

When a company drops a handful of press images alongside the announcement of a new product, we rarely get to see the back of the thing. And I get it — there's nothing particularly photogenic about a bunch of ports and cords. And that's mostly true of the new Google TV Streamer, which looks more like a router than it does a successor to the venerable Chromecast dongle.

But we did get the briefest glimpse of the rear of the device in Google's promo video. In it, you see the USB-C power cable and a hint of the Ethernet port. And those are great.

Read more
Chromecast now has a place in the Google Graveyard
The Chromecast with Google TV (left) and the Chromecast Ultra.

To be fair, Chromecast has lasted longer than a good number of other products from Google. And it's easy to understate just how important -- if unassuming -- a product it's been. But now, after 11 years, Chromecast has earned a plot in the Google Graveyard.

Google itself announced the death of the nearly 4-year-old Chromecast with Google TV, and with it, the entire Chromecast line, as it announced Google TV Streamer. "After 11 years and over 100 million devices sold," VP of engineering Majd Bakar wrote, "we're ending production of Chromecast, which will now only be available while supplies last."

Read more
Google TV Streamer is bigger, faster, and more expensive than Chromecast
The two colors of Google TV Streamer — hazel and porcelain — with their remote controls.

After nearly four long years, we finally have a successor to Chromecast with Google TV. Meet the just-as-awkwardly-named Google TV Streamer. It’s available for preorder now for $100 and will ship on September 24. (It was announced alongside a new — and beautiful — Nest Thermostat.)

That the price is twice that of Chromecast with Google TV should service notice that this is more than that old dongle. Same goes for the fact that it looks entirely different. This isn’t a dongle. Or a stick. Or a puck. Instead we get a much bigger device, though Google is quick to mention how sleek it is and that it “fits right into your home’s decor without standing out.”

Read more