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Media's AI Pivot
28JUN

DAZN buys ViewLift, folds in FIFA+

4 min read
08:57UTC

DAZN agreed to buy US streaming-technology firm ViewLift for about $100m and went live with an integrated FIFA+ carrying roughly 8,500 live football matches a year.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

For DAZN, buying distribution scale is the only moat left once vendors own the capability and the broadcast layer.

DAZN agreed to acquire the US streaming-technology provider ViewLift for roughly $100m, with the deal expected to close in June 1. DAZN is a global sports streaming platform; ViewLift runs the streaming plumbing for regional sports networks and team-owned services in the US, the part of the market left exposed after Diamond Sports Group collapsed into bankruptcy. DAZN is buying that distribution footprint, not a single product feature.

In the same window, the revamped FIFA+ direct-to-consumer service, which sells a subscription straight to the viewer rather than through a cable or satellite carrier, went live integrated into DAZN's platform, carrying around 8,500 live football events a year 2. The tie-up runs on DAZN's own Delta Protocol semantic-streaming layer, the build-side answer it has been developing alongside the buying. Separately, the FIFA World Cup: Launch Edition video game arrives exclusively on Netflix from Thursday 11 June 3, the latest case of a rights holder handing a first window to a platform it does not own.

DAZN has now answered the same structural question three ways inside a year. It ceded live distribution to TikTok for free Serie A streams in April and inherited Lenovo's entire World Cup broadcast stack without building any of it . The capability and the broadcast layer both sit with vendors, so the acquire leg, buying ViewLift for reach, is the only durable moat DAZN can own outright. Scale is what makes free, ad-light livestreams viable on its profit and loss.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

DAZN is a sports streaming service, a bit like Netflix but for live sport. It agreed to buy ViewLift, a US technology company, for roughly $100m in June 2026. ViewLift builds the software and infrastructure that lets sports teams and leagues run their own streaming services. At the same time, FIFA (football's global governing body) launched a revamped version of its FIFA+ streaming service, integrated directly into DAZN's platform. FIFA+ carries around 8,500 live football matches a year. Separately, Netflix launched an exclusive FIFA video game on 11 June. Together, these three moves show FIFA spreading its brand across multiple streaming and gaming platforms rather than relying on traditional broadcast deals.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Diamond Sports Group's bankruptcy in 2023 left the US regional sports network segment structurally vacant. ViewLift had spent 2023-2025 converting Diamond's former RSN clients onto its streaming platform, building a captive installed base of regional team-owned streaming services that have no alternative distribution infrastructure. DAZN is buying that captive installed base.

FIFA+'s integration reflects FIFA's own DTC ambition: the governing body wants a direct subscriber relationship rather than relying on national broadcast deals that compress FIFA's per-viewer economics.

DAZN's global platform gives FIFA+ distribution at a scale no single national broadcaster can match, and DAZN's DACH (Germany, Austria, Switzerland) subscriber base of 12.3 million post-RTL integration is a meaningful European distribution window for football that would otherwise require separate deals in three markets.

Netflix's exclusive FIFA World Cup: Launch Edition game from 11 June 2026 is the gaming-streaming convergence angle: FIFA is fragmenting its IP across three platforms simultaneously (DAZN for live, Netflix for gaming IP, and presumably broadcast deals for major tournament rights). The fragmentation strategy maximises rights revenue at the cost of viewer experience coherence.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    DAZN acquires ViewLift's 30+ RSN client contracts, giving it infrastructure for US regional sports distribution in the gap left by Diamond Sports Group's 2023 bankruptcy.

    Short term · Reported
  • Risk

    FIFA's simultaneous fragmentation across DAZN (live), Netflix (gaming), and separate broadcast deals reduces the coherence of its consumer proposition and may depress subscriber conversion if viewers cannot find FIFA content in one place.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Opportunity

    DAZN's post-RTL DACH subscriber base of 12.3 million combined with FIFA+ integration creates the largest single football streaming window in German-speaking Europe, ahead of any forthcoming Bundesliga rights renewal cycle.

    Medium term · Suggested
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