The NBA League Pass service, which provides access to numerous out-of-market basketball games via streaming, currently features discounts reaching 55 percent. The premium version is priced at $75, reduced from $160, and the standard option costs $50, a drop from $110. With the season now midway, promotions like this become increasingly relevant for viewers.
The standard subscription comes with advertisements and limits streaming to a single device simultaneously. In contrast, the premium package eliminates ads, includes live in-arena feeds during game interruptions, allows downloading complete matches for offline access, and supports up to three devices at the same time.
A year ago, the platform introduced a multiview feature enabling simultaneous display of as many as four games on one screen, available in both subscription levels. Additionally, a intelligent rewind function was added, which pulls out essential moments and segments automatically from games.
Beyond the United States and Canada, NBA League Pass streams every league game in real time. However, inside those nations, various limitations are in place. American viewers face blackouts for contests aired on local sports channels, as the focus remains on non-local matchups. Nationally televised games skip live access but become available on demand starting at 6 a.m. Eastern Time the next day. Coverage extends solely to regular-season action.
For dedicated supporters tracking several teams, NBA League Pass still unlocks plenty of viewable games despite U.S. limitations. Potential subscribers can review blackout details for their area by inputting a ZIP code prior to purchase.
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