About the project
Streaming platforms often prioritize volume over meaning. Endless catalogs, algorithmic suggestions, and static categories shape an experience that feels efficient, but rarely personal.
This project started from that gap.Instead of designing another browsing interface, the goal was to rethink how content discovery could feel more human. Inspired by platforms where taste is shaped through people, the experience introduces a social layer where films and series are discovered through the perspective of others.The system shifts from individual consumption to shared curation.
Recommendations, lists, and interactions become part of the core experience, allowing users to explore content through connections rather than just algorithms. What to watch becomes less about searching, and more about discovering.
The interface was designed to support this behavior with clarity and restraint. Built for TV OS, every interaction considers the remote control as the primary input. Navigation follows a simple and predictable structure, enabling users to move, select, and access content with minimal effort.
The experience feels responsive without demanding attention.Rather than overwhelming with options, the platform reveals content through context. Social signals guide decisions, creating a sense of relevance that feels natural and immediate.Visual choices focus on balance and readability.
Clean layouts, controlled spacing, and clear hierarchy ensure that the interface remains intuitive from a distance, while subtle transitions reinforce continuity across the experience.
The design doesnβt compete for attention. It creates a rhythm that supports discovery.
More than a streaming interface, this project explores how shared taste can redefine how people find and connect with content, turning entertainment into a more personal and collective experience.