When your media app freezes,
TV Keeper brings it back.

Pick the app you want to watch — like Kodi. TV Keeper catches crashes and frozen screens in seconds and brings it back, so movie night never ends with a remote that won't respond.

No ads No account No tracking $3.99 once — forever
TV Keeper is fixing Kodi. Please don't press any buttons.
Opening Kodi again…
✓  Kodi is back — 18 seconds

The real recovery, as it looks on screen: freeze detected → narrated fix → back to your show.

How it works

Three jobs. It does them quietly.

1

Watch

A background watchdog keeps an eye on the one app you chose — and only that app. It notices the moment it crashes to the home screen, stops answering, or the picture freezes while everything else still hums.

2

Catch

Crashes are caught right away; a frozen picture is usually confirmed in about 10 seconds. It's honest about its limits: it catches many kinds of freezes, not all of them.

3

Fix

With your permission it runs the whole fix itself — force stop, optionally clear the cache, reopen — narrating each step on screen. It restarts the app; it never touches your data, logins, or library.

Where it works

Built for the living room.

No root. No Kodi modification. No fragile macros. Proven on real hardware.

Fully automatic

Android TV & Google TV

The full experience: crashes and freezes fixed hands-off, start to finish.

  • NVIDIA Shield TV / Shield TV Pro
  • Chromecast with Google TV
  • Android TV boxes (Android 5.1+)
One-press recovery

Fire TV

Crashes restart automatically. For a hard freeze, TV Keeper spots it in seconds and takes you straight to the one button that fixes it — press it once, and the app is back about ten seconds later. Measured on real hardware.

  • Fire TV Stick 4K / 4K Max
  • Fire TV Stick (Fire OS 6+)
  • Fire TV Cube

Fire TV Stick HD (2026) and Fire TV Stick 4K Select (2025) — these run Amazon's Vega OS, not Android, and cannot run any Android app from any source.

Pricing

Pay once. Keep it forever.

Launch offer — $0.99 for the first 9 days
$3.99
one time · everything included · yours forever
  • Crash detection & automatic recovery
  • Freeze detection with one-button or automatic Reset
  • Multi-app watchdog — every TV box in the house, one app
  • Starts itself after every reboot
  • No subscription · no ads · no account

Sold only through the official app stores. Store links will appear here at launch.

Privacy

Your TV is not a data source.

TV Keeper does not send data to us, our servers, analytics services, advertisers, or third parties. It only connects to the media-app address you choose, on your own network.

No analyticsnothing is measured or reported
No accountinstall it and go
Stored on your devicesettings never leave the box
Credentials encryptedAES-256, hardware-backed

Read the full privacy policy →

Questions

Fair questions, honest answers.

Does it really fix a frozen app by itself?
On Android TV and Google TV — yes, when you switch on "Auto-recover when stuck" and "Watch for a frozen screen". TV Keeper spots the freeze (usually within about 10 seconds), announces what it's doing on screen, and restarts the app. Leave auto-recover off and it always asks first. It catches many kinds of freezes, not all of them.
What does it do on Fire TV?
Crashes restart automatically. For a hard freeze, Fire OS reserves the final "Force stop" press for you — so TV Keeper detects the freeze, takes you straight to that button, and reopens the app the moment you press it. About ten seconds from press to picture, measured on real hardware.
Will it ever delete my library, logins, or add-ons?
No. Recovery clears at most the app's cache — never app data. A built-in guard refuses destructive buttons like "Clear data" or "Uninstall" before every single tap, and that guard is enforced by automated tests on every build.
Why does it ask for Accessibility permission?
Only to perform the recovery steps you enable, on the app you selected: open that app's Settings page, tap Force stop, optionally clear the cache, and reopen it. It can only see the Settings app — never your media apps — and you can switch it off any time. Nothing it reads is stored or sent anywhere.
Is it a subscription?
No. $3.99 once, through the app store, and it's yours forever — including the $0.99 launch-offer purchases. No ads, no account, no upsells inside the app.
Does it work with apps other than Kodi?
TV Keeper is built and tested around Kodi today — that's where every recovery step has been proven on real hardware. The watchdog works with the app you point it at, and broader media-app support is on the roadmap.