How to Watch YouTube on PS Portal

Watching YouTube on the PS Portal isn’t exactly plug-and-play—Sony skipped adding native streaming apps. Still, with some creativity (and a PlayStation Plus Premium membership), users can launch YouTube through remote play from their PS5, or try a hidden, fairly shaky browser trick buried in network settings. Don’t expect blockbuster picture quality; these workarounds were never in Sony’s playbook, but they do work in a pinch. Curious about other ways inventive gamers bend the rules?

Getting YouTube to run on the PlayStation Portal isn’t exactly plug-and-play—no surprise, since Sony’s handheld streaming device wasn’t built with YouTube binge-watching in mind. For those who insist on squeezing video streaming into a gadget designed for remote gaming, there are a few creative, if not slightly roundabout, methods to make it happen.

First, the straightforward (well, relatively): remote play. Users need a PlayStation Premium membership, a PS5 console, and a rock-solid internet connection. The Portal connects to the PS5 via remote play, and from there, it’s possible to open the YouTube app on the console. The video streams through the PS5, displaying right on the Portal’s screen. Sky: Children of the Light is available for remote play through the PS Portal, and some users have found this opens up extra ways to access YouTube links.

This method does the trick, and allows for quick switching between games and YouTube, but it’s all dependent on network stability. If the Wi-Fi lags, so does your binge-watching session—hardly ideal for catching up on your favorite creators.

For those who enjoy a good hack, there’s the “hidden browser” route. In the PS Portal’s network settings, scrolling to the network status page reveals a not-so-obvious “social” button at the bottom. Clicking it opens a limited web browser, slyly offering access to a YouTube channel. Is it official? Not even close. Is it subject to vanishing with the next firmware update? Absolutely.

Gamers with a penchant for loopholes have uncovered that some PS4 games, like “Sky: Children of the Light,” provide in-game links to their YouTube channels. By running the game via remote play, then traversing to the YouTube icon, users can open videos—though the experience is definitely more “novelty” than “Netflix night.”

Full-screen playback isn’t perfect, and let’s be honest, Sony never intended for this. It’s worth noting, for sanity’s sake, that using the YouTube app on a phone or tablet is leagues easier. The Portal’s lack of an official browser or app means these workarounds are more parlor tricks than permanent solutions.

Still, for the stubbornly curious, it’s gaming ingenuity at its finest.

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