Features

OnNext does a small number of things and does them properly. Here is the full list, including what we deliberately left out.

On Next: your next episode, always first

The home screen is a single list showing the next unwatched episode of every show you follow. Tick an episode off and the next one slides into its place. Shows you have finished for now move under an Upcoming heading with the date the next episode airs, so the top of the list is always something you can watch tonight.

New-episode notifications

Follow a show and OnNext sends one push notification on the day a new episode airs. That is the entire notification story: no engagement nudges, no "we miss you" messages, no marketing. You can switch alerts off in Settings at any time.

Track shows and movies

Mark individual episodes, whole seasons or films as watched in a tap. Season progress shows exactly how far through you are, and a completed season gets its tick. Metadata, artwork and air dates come from TMDB, the community-run movie and TV database, so new episodes appear as soon as they are announced.

What's On

A trending tab with the week's most watched shows and films. When you want something new, it is one tap away; when you don't, it stays out of your way.

Episode pages and spoiler-safe comments

Every episode has its own page with the still, synopsis and air date, plus comments from other people who watched it. Comments are off by default: until you opt in from Settings, you will never see a comment or a comment count, so finales stay unspoiled. Replies are threaded one level deep, and every comment can be reported or its author blocked. Comments reported by multiple people are hidden automatically.

Your account, your data

Sign up with an email address and password. Password resets arrive as a six-digit code by email. You can delete your account, and everything we hold about you, from inside the app at any time. See the privacy policy for the full detail.

What OnNext deliberately does not have

Trackers die when they try to become social networks. OnNext stays a tool: open it, see what's on next, close it.