For years, one of the quiet joys of owning a Roku device was the ability to turn your television into a personal photo gallery. The Photo Streams feature allowed Roku owners to curate collections of their own images — family vacations, milestone moments, beloved pets — and have them automatically cycle through as a screensaver whenever the TV sat idle. It was a small but meaningful touch that made a streaming device feel more personal. Roku had announced plans to shut down Photo Stream earlier this year, but now it’s become a reality.
Roku has officially removed Photo Streams from its platform, ending a feature that had been a beloved part of the Roku experience for a significant portion of its user base. The removal was not accompanied by much fanfare or advance warning, leaving many users to simply discover one day that the feature had disappeared from their devices. For households that had grown accustomed to seeing cherished memories cycle across their screens, the loss has felt more personal than a typical software update.
Roku has pointed users toward its Backdrops app as the replacement solution. Backdrops allow users to display images on their screens while their Roku device is idle, and it does support personal photo uploads. On the surface, this sounds like a reasonable successor to Photo Streams. But Roku owners are saying the auto start of the Roku backdrops photo stream replacement no longer works.
The core complaint now spreading across Roku user forums and social media is that the Backdrops app does not automatically launch the way Photo Streams used to. With the old feature, a Roku owner could set up their photos once and trust that the screensaver would kick in on its own whenever the TV went idle. It was set-it-and-forget-it convenience that fit naturally into daily life. The Backdrops app, according to multiple user reports, requires a manual launch each time. That means every time a user wants their photos to display, they have to navigate to the app and start it themselves — a step that many find tedious and that defeats the purpose of an automatic screensaver.
This friction has sparked genuine frustration, particularly among older users or those who appreciated the simplicity of the original feature. The auto-start behavior was not a luxury add-on; for many people, it was the entire point. A screensaver that requires manual activation is, in the eyes of many users, not really a screensaver at all.
Roku has not issued a detailed public statement addressing the auto-start complaints directly, and it remains unclear whether the company plans to update the Backdrops app to restore the automatic functionality that Photo Streams once offered. In the meantime, users who relied on that feature are left waiting — or manually opening an app every single time they want their living room TV to feel like home.
For a company that built much of its brand on simplicity and ease of use, the Photo Streams removal and the rocky transition to Backdrops stands as a reminder that convenience, once given, is hard to take away without consequence.
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