Amazon has updated its Prime Video app on Apple TV with much-needed improvements, making it feel less clunky and more like a proper tvOS app.
Prime Video on Apple TV app should be less awful now following the latest update

Amazon has updated its Prime Video app on Apple TV with much-needed improvements, making it feel less clunky and more like a proper tvOS app.
If you use Amazon's video-streaming service, you'll soon be able to purchase Apple TV+ as an add-on subscription within the Prime Video app.
Amazon is rolling out a new tab to show you only the content that’s included in your Prime Video subscription, without any paid movies and TV shows mixed in.
Amazon now streams Prime Video content in regular HDR10 and Dolby Digital 5.1 instead of the higher-fidelity Dolby Vision HDR and Dolby Atmos standards.
Learn how to remove movies and TV shows from your Netflix and Amazon Prime Video watch history on your iPhone, iPad, Android phone, or computer.
Amazon Prime Video for Apple TV is now avaialble with a refreshed interface, making the software look and behave more like other streaming services.
Some companies take a more aggressive approach to redesigns, offering up new looks to their software (or hardware!) on a speedy basis. Some, though, take a much slower approach and don't refresh anything for years. But sometimes things just need a sprucing, and Amazon Prime Video definitely falls into that category.
New legislation in Europe, following directives from the European Union, may make it a bit more difficult for some streaming services to function in the region -- at least for a bit.
As part of its annual effort to showcase some of the best stories released for media consumption, the Peabody Awards has pointed to an Apple TV+ series as one of the 30 best offerings.
Back in October of last year, WarnerMedia and AT&T confirmed that its newest streaming service, the highly-anticipated HBO Max, would launch sometime in May of 2020. And now we know when, exactly, subscribers can start watching content.
Vudu has grown in popularity over the years for a variety of reasons, including its streaming quality for HD and 4K UHD films, but it's time under the Walmart banner has apparently ended.
Apple's guidelines for apps distributed through its App Stores can make it a difficult decision for companies, and developers, to allow for in-app purchases of any kind. But it looks like Amazon has finally decided to change its mind on the matter as far as video rental and purchases are concerned.