Sky to Discontinue Sky Live Camera Product, Offering Refunds up to £290

Sky has said it will stop selling its Sky Live camera thing, closing it down on December 4, 2025. People who get it will get money back, up to £290 —a quick end to a tool that came out less than three years ago, hoping to change how we watch TV.

A Good Start That Went Away Quickly

When Sky Live started in June 2023, it was shown as a cool extra for Sky Glass TVs. The thing lets folks play fun move games, do video chats, and even watch football with pals online. It had workout stuff that watched your moves while you worked out.

At first, it sounded neat. Sky said it would make TV time more social and busier. Families could play games, friends could chat during games, and kids could play with shows like Peppa Pig. But the fun did not last long. Even with its neat stuff, Sky Live did not get many users.

Price and Time Were Bad for It

One big reason it did not work was the high price. The thing costs £290 or a payment plan for £6 each month for two years, plus a Sky Glass plan. For many folks, mainly when things cost a lot, it was just too much for what it did.

When it came out, it was also a problem. Sky Live was made for times like the pandemic when folks stayed home more, chatting online. But as life got back to normal and folks went out more, the fun of these home things went down a lot.

Sky’s Word and Plans for the Future

Sky said its plan still puts new ideas first, but now it needs to put money into faster, easier stuff and amazing shows. The firm noted folks loved playing games on Sky Live so that it will put more games on Sky Glass and Sky Stream.

A Sky person told The Sun they love what Sky Live tried to do and what they learned will help make new things. Everyone who got Sky Live will get all their money back, no problem.

What it Means and Fewer Jobs

Sky Live closing happens as Sky changes, lately cutting around 600 jobs, mostly in tech. It shows even big tech and media firms are thinking things over and ditching things that are not doing so great.

A Neat Thought That Didn’t Click

Tech smarty-pants says Sky Live ending stinks, but makes sense. It was a cool thought to have fun stuff to do with TV, but most folks didn’t think it was a must-have. It may have come too soon or cost too much for many homes.

As Sky aims for its hit products like Sky Glass and Sky Stream, it wants to make watching better. Sky Live didn’t last long, but it taught them what folks really want: easy, cheap, and solid tech that fits into life.

Dr Layloma Rashid

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