Live Blogging of NBC’s Super Bowl Stream Across 25+ Devices and OTT Platforms; Detailed Tech Specs
I’ve been testing the Super Bowl LX stream on Sunday, starting with the pre-game stream, across more than 25 devices and platforms, documenting video quality, latency, and other technical metrics. Jump here for a list of all the platforms and devices I am testing, along with details about my setup. [You can see my 2025 Super Bowl coverage here]
NBC Sports’ stream of Super Bowl LX requires a Peacock Premium plan and is available on the NBC Sports website and app, with authentication via pay-TV credentials. Peacock doesn’t offer free trials, so anyone who wants to stream the Super Bowl on Peacock will need to pay for an account or, in the U.S., have YouTube TV, Sling TV, DirecTV, or Hulu + Live TV. Fubo is currently in a carriage dispute with NBCU, so the game won’t be on Fubo. The game is also available via OTA and will be broadcast on Telemundo and Universo. Outside the U.S., NFL Game Pass is offered via DAZN, and users can stream the Super Bowl for just £0.99. If there is anything you want me to test during the game, please put it in the comments on this LinkedIn Post.
Tech Specs
The Peacock stream is in “upscaled” 4K HDR; it is not native 4K, and I see many news outlets reporting it is in “true 4K HDR,” implying it is being captured in 4K when it isn’t. Also, this is not the “first time” the Super Bowl has been in upscaled 4K. I understand why some people are reporting that online, since, unlike the broadcast world, where there is a standard, streamers all define 4K differently. The NBC Sports press release was very clear when it said, “This marks the first time a Super Bowl and Olympic Games will be presented in 4K HDR on the NBC broadcast network and the Peacock streaming service.” It’s the first time on NBC’s platform that BOTH events are offered in upscaled 4K HDR, not the first time an “upscaled” 4K Super Bowl stream has been offered.
NBC Sports has deployed 22 mobile units from NEP Group, 145 cameras, 130 microphones, 75 miles of cable, and a team of more than 700 employees on-site. NBC’s contribution feed is 1080p 59.94 fps PQ with 5.1. and international partners are getting the same, but in HLG. Dolby is also upscaling the audio to Dolby Atmos.
- MPEG-DASH stream using CMAF-packaged fragmented MP4 with AES-CTR Common Encryption and multi-DRM (Widevine + PlayReady), protected by session-scoped CDN access tokens
- MPD manifest provides a 2-hour DVR window
- HD stream encoding bitrate ladder:
- 512×288 ~350 kb/s
- 768×432 ~860 kb/s
- 960×540 ~1.85 Mb/s
- 960×540 ~3.0 Mb/s
- 1280×720 ~4.8 Mb/s
- 1920×1080 ~7.8 Mb/s
- 1920×1080 ~10 Mb/s
- Audio: AAC-LC stereo 48 kHz ~128 kb/s
- Audio: E-AC3 (Dolby Digital Plus) 5.1 ~384 kb/s
- 4k stream encoding bitrate ladder:
- 640×360 ~500 kb/s
- 960×540 ~1.0 Mb/s
- 1280×720 ~2.5 Mb/s(59.94 fps)
- 1920×1080~5.8 Mb/s(59.94 fps)
- 3840×2160 ~10.0 Mb/s(59.94 fps)
- 3840×2160 ~13.0 Mb/s(59.94 fps)
- Audio: AAC-LC stereo 48 kHz ~128 kb/s
- Audio: E-AC3+JOC Dolby Atmos 5.1.4 ~640 kb/s
Latency Testing Results
For latency testing, I ran the test 10x per device and app/platform and compared the results to the OTA feed from two antennas. Note that many factors affect the latency viewers experience, so my experience may not be representative of other users. Here’s the latency I saw across devices and platforms:
*I’ll add latency testing from YouTube TV, Sling TV, Hulu + Live TV, DirecTV and NFL+ shortly.
For reference, here is a breakdown of streaming viewership for previous Super Bowl webcasts, but don’t go by the graphic alone. There are many differences across the years in how viewership was measured. See this post for a complete breakdown: Super Bowl Streaming Viewership Numbers From 2014-2025.
For the 2025 Super Bowl, FOX reported a rebuffer rate of 0.5%, a 28% share of viewership in 4K, and peak CDN capacity of 135 Tbps. You can see a detailed post-event breakdown of their workflow here: FOX Technical Presentation Details the Super Bowl LIX Streaming Video Stack
Here’s a breakdown of what I will be testing, along with more details on my setup:
- ISPs: Starlink, Verizon (500 Mbps), Optimum (300Mbps)
- OTA: Channel Master FLATenna and Mohu Leaf 50 TV antennas
- Platforms: Peacock, Sling TV, YouTube TV, NFL+, Hulu + Live TV, DirecTV, DAZN (Google AI says Fubo will have the game, but they won’t due to the carriage dispute. Another AI fail.)
- Devices: Fire TV Stick/Cube (AFTMA08C15/AFTKM/S3L46N/K3R6AT/K2R2TE/GA5Z9L/A78V3N), Roku (3821X2, 3940X2, 4800, 3820, 3820CA2) Apple TV (A2843/A2169/A1842), DIRECTV Gemini (P21KW-500), iPads (6x different models), MacBooks (4x, all 2022 and newer), iPhone (14/15 Pro/16 Pro Max)
- TVs: LG (55C9AUA/65BXPUA/65NANO80T6A), Samsung (UN40F5500AF/QN65S90CAFXZA/QN1EF), Vizio (V4K65M-0804/V4K55M-0801), TCL Roku TV (65S451)
- All devices with ethernet or a supported ethernet adapter are being used, all other devices are on wifi
- Every device is running the lastest app and OS version available








