Microsoft desperately needs a podcasts app for Windows 12

Subscribe and listen to your shows with a Windows 12 app

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

I have something to ask of you - tell me the first podcast app that comes to mind for you onWindows 11. Can you subscribe to your favorite shows as soon as you set up your new Windows PC? If you’re still struggling for an answer, that’s exactly whyMicrosoftneeds to introduce its own forWindows 12.

Applehas arguably been leading the charge with podcasts, ever since it introduced the category intoiTunes 4.9 back in 2005. Since then, it’s expanded into itsown appon all of its platforms, with thePodcasts appstill receiving new features as recently asWWDC 2023earlier this year, such as support for individual episode art and a redesigned Now Playing screen.

And that’s without even mentioning the plethora of third-party podcast apps that you can download - fromOvercasttoPocket Casts, and even Spotify as it hosts its own exclusiveshows by Louis Therouxand more to tempt you to subscribe.

But for Windows users, it’s not as straightforward – similar tohow I think MSN Messenger should come backto be a rival to iMessage andWhatsApp, it’s time for Microsoft to look at something similar for podcasts as a dedicated app.

Tap to Follow

Tap to Follow

If you go to the Microsoft Store inWindows 11and type in ‘podcasts’, you’ll be greeted with a bunch of free and paid podcast apps that don’t quite fit the brief for Windows.

Some, likeGrover Pro, offer a focused experience, reminiscent of Groove Music before it was remade back into Media Player in 2022, but its updates are few and far between, and its name and design harkens back toWindows 8- something Microsoft likely doesn’t want to reference again.

Oddly, it turns out Microsofthas a bunch of its own podcasts, but not a dedicated app to showcase them all.

Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.

Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.

Sign up to be the first to know about unmissable Black Friday deals on top tech, plus get all your favorite TechRadar content.

Right now, the only app that offers something close to an integrated experience for Windows users isSpotify- and that’s not good enough for a company as big as Microsoft.

While Media Player can play videos as well as music inWindows 11, it would be great to see a new, standalone app that only focuses on podcasts inWindows 12. We’ve seen before how an app, such as iTunes, can havetoo manyfeatures - making it feel bloated and slow.

My advice for Microsoft? Adapt some of the design tropes of Media Player, and simply call it ‘Windows Podcasts Player’ - it fits with the name of the existing music app, and it tells you exactly what the app does and who it’s designed by.

Using your Microsoft account could be useful here. As it keeps tabs on the media you’ve bought in the past, such as movies and games, it could also keep a record of the shows you’re subscribed to through this app. So if you download the app on an iPhone for example, you’d just have to sign in to your Microsoft account and it could download a record of the shows you’ve subscribed to alongside the latest one you’re currently listening to - just like other podcast apps, like Overcast.

This can also work well when you buy a new device or upgrade toWindows 12for the first time. During the start-up screen when you’ve signed into your account, it could already fetch the podcasts you’ve been listening to, and have them ready before you’ve even reached the Desktop.

This is where it leads into Microsoft’s mantra, long held by CEO Satya Nadella, of why it should also be available on as many platforms as possible. But Nadella’s also got a trump card.

Podcasting, the Microsoft way

Microsoft has a unique opportunity on its hands - it offers Xbox, itsSurface tablet and desktop line, alongside its Android smartphone calledSurface Duo. Nadella has consistently pushed the objective of Windows being a service, and a podcasts app can fulfill that brief, and more.

Having a dedicated podcasts app that can sync across all of these devices would be very appealing - more so if you can control the playback of shows as you’re playingDead by Daylight: Nicolas Cagefor example.

The majority of podcasts are hosted through what’s called an RSS Feed - this is essentially a ‘live’ link that will refresh when new content appears within it. This is how a podcast can upload new episodes to it, and apps that work with this, can display the episode and the artwork, and show notes to links for it.

But some apps, like Apple Podcasts and Spotify, can allow creators to offer ‘premium’ feeds, where there could be episodes with no ads included, or it could have exclusive content that you pay a monthly fee for it.

Microsoft’s Podcast Player could also take advantage of this while taking a small cut of the proceeds. It’s a win-win scenario for the company and these hosts, especially if the rates for these creators are better than what Spotify and Apple offer on both their own platforms.

Another easy win for Microsoft - if it decides to

It’s still amazing that in 2023, it’s a category that Microsoft simply hasn’t shown any interest in making easier for its users. Podcasts areeverywhere, and if you’re onAndroidoriOS, it’s easily accessible in a few taps.

But you’re currently stuck with third-party options, and that’s if they work without issues on your Windows 11 machine. Then you have to manage another app on another device. It’s a headache no one wants, and it’s not needed in an age of the cloud.

ForWindows 12, using a ‘Windows Podcast Player’ could be another resolved pain point that would appeal to plenty of users who listen to shows daily, all within the Windows ecosystem, which could be synced across all your Microsoft devices.

It gives the company a lot of opportunity here, and it goes back to the mantra of having Windows as a service on as many devices as possible - so let’s see the same for an open podcast platform in Windows 12, and see it succeed as well as iTunes did with the category back in 2005.

You might also like

Daryl had been freelancing for 3 years before joining TechRadar, now reporting on everything software-related. In his spare time, he’s written a book, ‘The Making of Tomb Raider’. His second book, ‘50 Years of Boss Fights’, came out in 2024, with a third book coming in 2025. He also has a newsletter called ‘Springboard’. He’s usually found playing games old and new on his Steam Deck, Nintendo Switch, and MacBook Pro. If you have a story about an updated app, one that’s about to launch, or just anything Software-related, drop him a line.

Windows 11 24H2 misery continues, as Microsoft’s buggy update is now breaking printers – especially on Copilot+ PCs

Microsoft reportedly sabotaged Windows 95 and 98’s Control Panel, or it looks that way – is this a worrying revelation?

Best lightweight Linux distro of 2024