Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Max not working? Why the HBO Max successor’s launch has been wonky

The Max app as seen on Apple TV.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Today’s a big day for the new Max streaming service. After months of fanfare from execs, the combined HBO Max/Discovery streaming service has launched. But despite all the talk of a better tech platform (which might well be true!) and all the new content (which definitely is true), Max is not working for some. Or the idea of having to download a new app is awkward and annoying at best.

Here’s what you need to know about the whole transition.

Recommended Videos

Why isn’t Max working?

There are a few things that could be a play here, but there’s one obvious one: Unlike HBO Max, the new Max service is only available in the U.S., including American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

So if you’re outside any of those locations and Max isn’t working, there’s your answer.

Max will expand. It’s coming to Latin America and the Caribbean by the end of the year, according to a support document. Europe is on tap for 2024. Same for Southeast Asia. That timeline could change, though. In the meantime, there are workarounds.

Why is there a new Max app?

When HBO Go and HBO Now merged into HBO Max in May 2020, applications updated in place and you didn’t need to download anything new. That’s not the case for a lot of folks looking to make the switch to Max now that it’s live.

If you’re on an Amazon device, Cox, Roku, Vizio, or Xfinity, it looks like the apps should have updated from HBO Max to Max. Other devices — like Android TV, Apple TV, or various other smart TVs, will require you to download the Max app itself, likely due to constraints of those various app stores.

The new Max app looks almost exactly like HBO Max.
The new Max app looks almost exactly like HBO Max. But they’re two very different apps. Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

Do I need a new Max account?

If you had an HBO Max account before, you have a Max account now. Full stop. In fact, you might well not even have to log in to the new Max app — at least if you still have the old HBO Max on the same device (so maybe wait a second before deleting it). While we can think of a few reason that’s not the greatest of ideas, not having to create a new account is a good thing.

Did they really do this right before the Succession finale?

Yep.

But … why? Wasn’t this supposed to be easy?

Look, the folks at Warner Bros. Discovery said the only thing they could — that the transition should be easy and that your accounts would sync up quite nicely. And that mostly appears to be true. They downplayed that this was never really a 1:1 transition the way that HBO Go/Now merged into HBO Max.

But there’s one big thing to remember as you have to download a new app and deal with a new user interface or wait for your country to come online:

Max is not just a rebranded HBO Max. It’s the combination of HBO Max and Discovery. That means a ton of new content. And where there’s new content, there are new lawyers. Content distribution is a rat’s nest of legalese, which is why some shows aren’t available in some places, or on some devices, or in some ways. It’s a nightmare for those of us who have do deal with even a sliver of any of it from the outside. And while that doesn’t excuse a window in which Max doesn’t work and it might not account for any sort of technical glitches or network snarls — which are more than possible any time a high-profile streaming service goes live — we should remember that there are a lot of moving parts here. Some are technical. Some are legal. And some might have just been missed.

Phil Nickinson
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
10 years ago, the most underrated crime movie of the 2010s was a box office failure
Doc watches Shasta on a beach in Inherent Vice.

For much of his career, Paul Thomas Anderson has excavated the grimy, sun-soaked past of California, the state he was born in and has long called home. In Boogie Nights, he explored the pornography boom of the late 1970s in the San Fernando Valley, a literally over-the-hill region of Los Angeles he's returned to repeatedly in Magnolia, Punch-Drunk Love, and Licorice Pizza. Even There Will Be Blood, the severe, twisted 2007 epic many still consider Anderson's greatest achievement, spends most of its towering runtime on the oil boom that partly built Los Angeles.

Most of Anderson's whirlwind trips through the city he loves have received rapturous applause, and his fascination with California's odd, tangled history is apparent in every one. However, few of his tours through Los Angeles' past are filled with as much heartache as Inherent Vice, the 2014 stoner detective dramedy that remains Anderson's most underrated piece of work. When it was released 10 years ago, Inherent Vice was largely rejected. It grossed only $14 million at the box office against a $20 million budget, received very little serious awards attention, and it remains his least critically adored film.

Read more
3 underrated (HBO) Max movies you should watch this weekend (December 6-8)
A group of men sit at a table in Conspiracy.

Have you defied gravity yet? If not, you're one of the few who haven't. Wicked is a genuine phenomenon right now, and one of the leading contenders for next year's Oscars. But I haven't taken a trip to Oz yet simply because there's too much good stuff on streaming right now.

That's especially true for Max, which has great films from the present to the distant past. (Yes, they even have 1939's The Wizard of Oz.) If you have a craving for movies that don't contain evil witches, pink-colored princesses, or flying monkeys, well, this list is for you. These movies may have Nazis, porn stars, and real-life artists, but they are all united by their ability to entertain and even enlighten.

Read more
2024’s most polarizing movie now has a streaming release date on Max
The Joker stands in front of two cops in an elevator in "Joker: Folie à Deux."

Arthur Fleck is singing and dancing his way to Max this month. Joker: Folie à Deux will be available to stream on Max starting on Friday, December 13. It will then make its HBO linear debut at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday, December 14.

Polarizing doesn't even begin to describe Joker: Folie à Deux. Most audiences and critics completely rejected Todd Phillips' musical. In his two-star review for Digital Trends, A.A. Dowd wrote: "The Joker sequel is unlikely to satisfy old fans or convert new ones.”

Read more