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New Philips Hue Sports Live software syncs smart lights to the action

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Philips Hue Sports Live
Sports Live software doesn't need a hardware connection to react to action onscreen. It uses data.
Photo: Signify

Philips Hue and its sibling smart-lighting brand WiZ both get a new feature soon that could change how you watch the World Cup this summer, parent company Signify said Thursday. Called Sports Live, the software uses real-time match data to trigger lighting effects in your home whenever key moments happen on the pitch — goals, yellow cards, red cards — with no manual input or hardware required.

“With Sports Live, we’re moving beyond the traditional screen-based sync offering, broadening the role of smart lighting in at-home sports entertainment,” said said John Smith, business leader for Connected Lighting at Signify.

“By using live match data to trigger lighting in real time, we’re creating a new level of precision and immersion in how fans experience sports at home, making every match a truly memorable occasion,” he added.

Philips Hue Sports Live: How it works

Sports Live is timed to arrive ahead of the World Cup, with a phased launch beginning in May and a full release in June. It’s powered by an integrated live sports data API that connects compatible home lighting systems to key match events, according to Signify’s press release. So when a goal goes in, your smart lights react. When a red card is shown, the room responds.

The system is designed for live viewing. So there’s also a way to manually adjust timing to compensate for broadcast delays. If you pause the match, the lighting effects pause, too. And when you resume, they re-sync automatically to what’s happening live.

Between the big moments, the lights don’t just sit idle. During quieter periods of play, the system intelligently adapts to the game state, showing your favorite team’s color, the leading team’s color, or a warm white when the score is tied.

Setup and compatibility

Philips Lights
Philips Hue Lights
Photo: Philips

Setup is designed to take just a few minutes. You pick your team, assign your compatible color-capable lights, and the system does the rest. There’s no need for specialized hardware or connecting other services.

For Philips Hue users, the feature works through the Philips Hue app and requires a Hue Bridge. The experience can scale from a single room to a larger zone of your home depending on your setup. WiZ users get a Wi-Fi-based setup that works without a Bridge and supports an unlimited number of lights.

Crucially, Sports Live doesn’t replace existing features. The software complements existing tools like Hue Sync or WiZ Sync with TV. That offers greater flexibility in how you customize at-home entertainment setups, and no additional HDMI syncing hardware is needed.

Free software update

So Sports Live fits into a broader push from Signify to make smart lighting a more active part of home entertainment rather than a passive backdrop. 

For Philips Hue owners — a popular choice among Apple Home users — the feature arrives as a free software update via the Hue app. Sports Live begins rolling out in May with a full release in June, aligned with the tournament’s start. One caveat worth noting: the experience relies on third-party match data, so availability and performance cannot be guaranteed at all times.

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