When you’re glued to a live cricket match on Cricfy TV Premium APK, your battery drains faster than you’d expect. Especially during long sessions, if you’re not near a charger, your phone might die before the final over.
But here’s the good part — with a few small changes, you can easily stream matches and still save battery life. No technical knowledge needed. Just some smart habits.
1. Cut Down the Brightness
First thing — your screen eats battery like crazy. Most people don’t even realize they’re watching the match at full brightness even indoors. You don’t need it that high unless you’re sitting outside under the sun.
- Go to your display settings
- Drop brightness to a comfortable level (40–50%)
- Or turn on auto-brightness
Even if you’re indoors, this one step alone can stretch your battery life.
2. Switch to Medium Video Quality
Yeah, we all love HD. But honestly, 1080p is not worth it if you’re watching on a regular phone screen and losing battery. Streaming in 480p or 720p still looks decent — and it reduces power usage big time.
Inside Cricfy, pick a lower video quality from the settings or quality button during playback.
3. Use Wired Earphones
Speakers take more battery. The louder the volume, the faster it drains. If you plug in simple wired earphones, you’ll save battery and get better sound. Wireless earbuds are okay too, just make sure they’re fully charged before the match starts.
4. Kill Other Apps Running in the Background
Before you launch Cricfy, swipe away any apps you’re not using — especially social media, games, and browser tabs. Even if they’re not on screen, they’re quietly running in the back and sipping power.
Go to your app switcher and clear them all. Or use your phone’s built-in RAM booster if it has one.
5. Enable Battery Saver Mode
Almost every Android phone has it. When you turn it on, the phone automatically limits background stuff and lowers performance just enough to extend battery life — without messing up your video streaming.
Go to:
Settings > Battery > Battery Saver > Turn On
Some phones also let you schedule it or auto-enable at 15–20%.
6. Turn Off Notifications
Every time a notification pops up, the screen lights up — and your battery takes a hit. During a live match, these interruptions not only disturb you but also add to battery use. Turn on Do Not Disturb mode until the match ends.