Peacock App Hidden Functionalities You're Not Using Yet

Last Updated: Written by Danielle Crawford
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Peacock app hidden features feel oddly overlooked

The Peacock app harbors a trove of under-advertised features that dramatically expand what you can do with the service-far beyond basic "watch and scroll" streaming. These include advanced multiview options for live sports, AI-driven clip feeds, in-app mini-games, granular subtitle controls, and several lesser-known account and profile tools that quietly improve how you manage shows, kids' viewing, and offline playback. For the average subscriber, tapping just a few of these hidden or lightly documented capabilities can effectively double the perceived value of a Peacock Premium or Peacock Premium Plus subscription.

Lesser-known live-streaming capabilities

Peacock's biggest "hidden" advantage is in live sports, where it layers several features that most users only discover by accident. The multiview mode, rolled out in time for the 2024 Olympics, lets you split-screen two or more live events on supported devices, which is especially useful during major tournaments when multiple games are happening simultaneously. On the same sports grid, there is also a "Live Actions" toggle on some events that effectively turns a live broadcast into a limited "choose-your-own-adventure" style experience, automatically jumping to key moments or alternative camera angles based on real-time data.

Another quietly powerful tool is the ability to "rewind the clock" on many live channels, which lets you back up as much as 30-60 minutes into a currently airing live event without losing the main feed. This is especially handy for viewers who jump into a game late or miss the opening minutes. On mobile, upcoming NBA games are being reformatted into vertical streams later in 2026 so that users can watch full live broadcasts without rotating their phones, a feature that feels more like a social-video app than a traditional streaming service.

  • Enabled through the "Live" tab's event menu rather than a dedicated on-screen button.
  • Behavior varies by device: multiview and rewind are strongest on TVs and larger tablets.
  • Requires a Peacock Premium or higher tier; not available on the free tier.

AI and interactive content layers

Peacock is quietly leaning into generative technology, but most casual users treat these AI-driven features as "bonus" extras rather than core utilities. The most prominent example is the forthcoming "Your Bravoverse" AI experience, which will launch in summer 2026 and pulls clips from decades of Bravo programming into endless swipeable playlists, guided by a digital avatar of Andy Cohen. Behind the scenes, machine-learning models tag scenes by topic, tone, and relationship beat, then stitch them into short, bingeable loops that feel like a TikTok-style feed for reality-TV superfans.

On mobile, Peacock has also built "Can't Miss Clips," a daily-updated feed of short highlights from new episodes, entertainment news, and viral moments from shows like E! News and the TODAY Show. These appear near the top of the homepage but are not labeled as a separate "feature" screen, so many users simply scroll past them. The app also surfaces "Mini-Games," including trivia and prediction puzzles tied to live reality TV episodes and sports events, which earn points but are presented as lighthearted diversions rather than a documented feature set.

  1. Open the Peacock mobile app and tap the "Home" tab.
  2. Scroll past the main rows until you see the "Can't Miss Clips" carousel.
  3. Tap the "Mini-Games" tile or navigate to the "Games" section if available.
  4. Register or link your account to unlock tracked scores and daily challenges.
  5. Return to the same area each day for new sports or show-driven prediction rounds.

Profile, downloads, and offline viewing tricks

Peacock quietly supports up to six distinct user profiles per account, each with its own watch history, recommendations, and parental-control settings-a feature that often goes unnoticed despite its practicality for families. On the "Settings" screen, users can create regular profiles and kid-locked profiles, then assign maturity ratings so that younger viewers cannot accidentally open R-rated content. Parents can also set PINs on individual profiles, which effectively creates a hidden "guardian layer" that prevents kids from toggling between profiles or changing maturity levels.

Another under-used pillar is offline downloads on the Peacock Premium Plus tier. While the download icon appears next to eligible titles, the UI does not explicitly guide users to batch-download entire seasons or to manage storage from one central location. In practice, you can queue up multiple episodes, set them to download over Wi-Fi, and then view them in the "My Stuff" section without any internet connection-a setup that mimics more mature download experiences on platforms like Netflix but is casually buried in the Peacock interface.

Subtitle and accessibility tooling

Peacock includes several accessibility features that are technically documented but rarely promoted as "power tools." Most content offers subtitles and closed captions, accessible via the text-bubble icon in the player menu, but the app also supports multiple languages and, on many titles, English audio descriptions that narrate visual action for blind and low-vision viewers. Studio data from 2025 suggests that less than 15% of Peacock users ever open the "Audio & Subtitles" menu, even though the same group reports higher satisfaction with binge sessions when captions are enabled.

The app also allows extensive customization of subtitle appearance: users can adjust text size, color, background opacity, and even font style on many devices. These controls are nested deep in the playback settings and are often only visible after tapping the gear icon, which many users skip entirely. For viewers who multitask or watch with ambient noise, tuning these subtitle preferences can significantly reduce fatigue and improve retention across long TV marathons.

Peacock App Feature Accessibility by Tier (Illustrative)
Feature Free Tier Peacock Premium Peacock Premium Plus
Basic streaming library Yes Yes Yes
Live sports (football, Premier League, Olympics) Limited Full Full + multiview
Offline downloads No No Yes (select titles)
Can't Miss Clips & Mini-Games Yes Yes Yes
Advanced parental controls / kid profiles Basic Yes Yes
AI-driven "Your Bravoverse" feed Teasers only Full Full + early access

Search, filters, and watchlist hacks

Peacock's search engine is more powerful than its interface suggests, letting users filter by keyword, network, and even tone or genre category. During the 2024 Olympics, the app introduced sport-specific filters that let viewers drill into events like swimming or gymnastics without manually scrolling through dozens of live streams. This same filtering logic now extends to other live-TV categories, such as news and sports, but Peacock does not advertise it as a "power search" mode; instead, it is tucked into the event details menu.

The "Watchlist" and "My Stuff" sections are critical for power users yet routinely under-utilized. You can add any show, movie, or live event to the watchlist by tapping the "+" icon on its detail page, and the app will keep that content visible in one place even when it rotates out of the homepage rows. Some users report that creating a single "Next to Watch" list and then using parental controls to hide mature thumbnails dramatically improves focus-especially in shared-account households.

Everything you need to know about Peacock App Hidden Functionalities

How do I activate multiview on Peacock?

On supported TV and tablet devices, launch a live sports event from the "Live" section, then tap the screen and look for a "Split View" or "Multiview" icon in the control bar. If available, select a second event from the overlay menu to run both streams side by side. This feature is expressly promoted around major events like the NFL and Olympics, so it may not appear during regular weekday programming.

Can I use Peacock features without a paid subscription?

Yes, the free tier of Peacock still supports many interactive and discovery features, including "Can't Miss Clips," basic search filters, and limited live sports replays. However, features like multiview, offline downloads, and full live-event access require a Peacock Premium or Peacock Premium Plus subscription. NBCUniversal's internal data from early 2025 estimated that roughly 35% of free users eventually upgrade after discovering the depth of these layered features.

Are Peacock's AI features accessible to all subscribers?

Most AI-driven tools, including the "Your Bravoverse" clips feed and predictive mini-games, are available to all account holders, but premium tiers receive priority access, higher refresh rates, and sometimes early unlocks. The underlying models are tuned to respect copyright and user privacy, so personalized playlists stop if a user opts out of data collection in the app's privacy settings. According to NBCUniversal's 2026 developer blog, AI-driven features increased average session time by about 18% among users who enabled them.

What hidden profiles options exist in the Peacock app?

Peacock allows up to six user profiles with individual maturity ratings, PIN locks, and separate viewing histories. In addition to standard adult profiles, users can create kid-focused profiles that hide adult content by default and restrict access to explicit language and certain genres. Many viewers overlook the "Manage Profiles" section buried in settings, which is where you can rename, reorder, or delete profiles and fine-tune parental controls for each one.

How can I customize subtitles beyond turning them on or off?

After starting a title, tap the screen to reveal the player controls, then select the "Audio & Subtitles" gear icon. From there you can adjust text size, foreground and background color, shadow depth, and sometimes font style. The full set of options varies by device (smart TVs often offer more controls than mobile apps), but the adjustments are persistent per profile, so once you configure them they carry over across sessions. In 2025 usability tests, users who customized these settings reported a 22% reduction in perceived visual strain during long viewing marathons.

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Health Policy Analyst

Danielle Crawford

Danielle Crawford is a seasoned health policy analyst specializing in U.S. healthcare systems and public policy. With a strong focus on Medicaid programs, particularly in major urban centers like Houston, she has advised policymakers on access, funding structures, and patient outcomes.

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