Find answers to common questions about Stroku
Stroku is a pair of apps that bridge the gap between Stremio and Roku devices. It consists of Stroku Sender (Android app) and Stroku Receiver (Roku channel) that work together to stream content from Stremio to your Roku device over your local WiFi network.
Installation is a two-step process:
Both apps are now easily accessible - no developer mode or sideloading required!
The easiest way to stream from Stremio to your Roku:
Yes, both your Android device and Roku must be connected to the same WiFi network for Stroku to work. This is how the apps discover and communicate with each other.
Stroku Receiver supports multiple video formats including:
Resolution support: HD (720p), FHD (1080p), and UHD (4K) depending on your Roku model.
If the Stroku Sender can't find your Roku device, try these solutions:
To find your Roku's IP address:
Yes! Stroku Receiver is available in the official Roku Channel Store and works on all Roku devices running Roku OS 9.0 or higher. Simply search for "Stroku Receiver" in the Channel Store and install it like any other channel.
If you're experiencing playback issues:
If either app crashes or becomes unresponsive:
Stroku is specifically designed for Stremio content. While it might work with other apps that provide direct video URLs, it's not officially supported or tested with other streaming services.
No. Stroku operates entirely on your local network. No data is collected, stored, or transmitted to external servers. All communication happens directly between your Android device and Roku over your WiFi network.
Stroku itself is legal software that simply streams content from one device to another on your network. However, you are responsible for ensuring you have the right to stream any content you choose to stream. Always respect copyright laws and content licensing agreements.
Yes! Stroku is open source software. You can view, audit, and contribute to the source code on GitHub:
The original Stroku consists of an Android Sender app and a Roku Receiver channel, requiring you to cast streams from your phone. Stroku Native is a standalone Stremio client running directly on your Roku device. You can browse movie/series catalogs, sync your library, manage add-ons, and play direct streams using only your Roku remote. No phone or casting is required!
Stroku Native is available directly from the official Roku Channel Store. Go to your Roku home screen, navigate to Streaming Channels → Search Channels, search for "Stroku", and select "Add Channel". For more details, see the Installation Guide.
Press the * button on your Roku remote while on the Stroku Native home screen and select "Connect Stremio" to display a pairing code. On a phone or computer, open a browser, navigate to link.stremio.com, log in to Stremio, and enter the pairing code. The app will automatically sync your library!
While Stroku Native is open on your TV, copy your add-on manifest URL (e.g. https://torrentio.strem.fun/manifest.json), look at the LAN setup IP displayed in the top-right corner of the TV screen, and open that address on a phone or computer browser on the same network. Paste the URL and click "Add to Roku". Alternatively, you can press the * remote button and paste the URL using the on-screen keyboard.
For Torrentio specifically, open torrentio.strem.fun/configure on your phone or computer, choose your providers and debrid settings, then use the generated install/copy link. Open the Stroku Native setup page shown on your TV, usually http://<your Roku IP>:8324, paste the Torrentio link there, and click Add to Roku.
Roku OS does not have a built-in torrent client and cannot stream raw peer-to-peer torrent connections. Raw torrent links (results containing only an infoHash) are automatically filtered out. To watch streams, you must use add-ons configured with a debrid service (such as Real-Debrid, Premiumize, or Alldebrid). The debrid provider downloads the torrent on their secure servers and serves it to the Roku as a direct HTTP/HTTPS playback link.
Yes! Stroku Native supports selecting embedded or external SRT subtitle tracks during playback. In the app Settings, you can customize the subtitle font style, size, text color, and background opacity to optimize readability on your TV screen.
Real-Debrid serves raw files and does not transcode them. Compatibility depends entirely on the video/audio decoding codecs supported by your physical Roku model. Some high-end containers (like MKV) or advanced audio formats (like TrueHD, DTS) may fail to decode or play video-only on older Roku devices. For the best compatibility, I recommend configuring your stream add-ons to prioritize MP4/HLS streams using H.264 video and AAC audio.
If you can't find the answer you're looking for, open a GitHub issue with details about your setup.
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