Chromecaster: Get Streaming TV app icon

Entertainment · iOS

Chromecaster: Get Streaming TV

by TV Cast Pte. Ltd.

Free212 MBv5.9.4Ages 17+
4.2Store rating
16KRatings
212 MBSize
2019Released
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Chromecaster pitches itself as a bridge between your iPhone or iPad and any Chromecast device on the same Wi-Fi network. It handles local camera roll content, cloud files from Dropbox and Google Drive, and web video streaming up to 4K HD. The catch is a hard wall around DRM-protected services, so Netflix, Prime Video, Hulu, and similar platforms are completely off the table. What remains is a genuinely useful tool for personal media, with limitations that require honest upfront expectations.

Local and Cloud Playback

Where Chromecaster earns its keep is with content you actually own. Casting photos, videos, and music straight from your camera roll works reliably, and the addition of Dropbox and Google Drive support means files stored in the cloud are reachable without downloading them first. A playback queue that lets you add and remove videos on the fly is a practical touch that keeps sessions feeling organized rather than stop-start.

The DRM Wall and Web Streaming Limits

The app streams only the video portion of a webpage, not a full mirrored browser session, which trips up plenty of sites with embedded players. More critically, every major subscription service is blocked by DRM. If your mental image of casting involved watching Netflix or Prime on a big screen, this app will disappoint immediately. The store listing does state this clearly, but the app name and marketing framing can still set the wrong expectation.

Who Actually Benefits

Travelers who carry personal video files, photographers wanting a quick slideshow on a hotel TV, or anyone managing media in Google Drive or Dropbox will find real value here. The 212 MB install is reasonable for what it does, the 4.15 rating across 16,000 reviews suggests a stable, largely bug-free experience, and regular updates through mid-2026 indicate the developer is still actively maintaining it.

Pros

  • Camera roll casting covers video, photos, and music in one place
  • Dropbox and Google Drive support avoids redundant local downloads
  • Playback queue with add and remove controls keeps sessions fluid
  • Strong store rating of 4.15 across a large 16K review base
  • Actively updated as recently as June 2026

Cons

  • Netflix, Prime Video, Hulu, HBO, and all major DRM services are unsupported
  • Web streaming captures only the video element, not a full browser mirror
  • iTunes movie purchases and Flash video are also blocked
  • Requires both device and Chromecast on the same network, which can be tricky on hotel or public Wi-Fi
  • Free pricing almost certainly means paywalled features sit behind in-app purchases