Boosteroid on Fire TV: Artem Skory's team scales Ukrainian cloud gaming
Cloud gaming today is transforming from a niche product into a full-fledged infrastructure segment of the digital economy. Its defining characteristic is the combination of physical data centers with global consumer platforms. The Ukrainian company Boosteroid is one example of this model, developing its own server infrastructure across Europe, North America, and Latin America. Vice President of Business Development Artem Skoryi plays a key role in scaling this model, including the expansion of the service into the Amazon Fire TV ecosystem.
The launch of the Boosteroid application on Fire TV became a logical continuation of a long-term strategy to integrate the service into Smart TV environments. Prior to this, under the leadership of Artem Skoryi, the company implemented partner integrations with Samsung TizenOS, LG webOS, and a range of devices based on Android TV. These projects established the technological and commercial foundation for scaling the service in the television segment and enabled the development of cloud gaming distribution models through mass-market consumer devices.
Unlike traditional cloud services, Boosteroid relies on its own physical infrastructure rather than leasing third-party computing resources. The company’s physical servers are deployed across dozens of data centers in three macro-regions, enabling low-latency connectivity and stable streaming quality. It was on top of this infrastructure that the integration with the Amazon Fire TV platform was built, serving as the next stage of global expansion.
Within the Amazon project, Artem Skoryi was responsible for the negotiation process, alignment of commercial terms, and coordination of product compliance with Fire TV technical standards. His role included synchronizing requirements for streaming protocols, access control, and application stability with the architecture of Boosteroid’s proprietary data centers. In practice, this involved adapting a distributed server ecosystem to the environment of a platform serving a multi-million-user audience.
Boosteroid’s entry into Fire TV provided access to television screens across the United States, Europe, and Latin America without the need to build separate local distribution platforms. At the same time, all computational workloads remain on the company’s physical servers, while Amazon’s platform functions as a high-level access interface to Boosteroid’s distributed infrastructure. This model fundamentally differs from approaches that rely entirely on public cloud environments.
From an industry perspective, Smart TVs are no longer merely devices for passive content consumption but are becoming full-fledged access points for complex interactive services. Boosteroid’s series of integrations with Samsung, LG, multiple Android TV platforms, and now Amazon Fire TV demonstrates the systemic nature of this transformation. Artem Skoryi is among the executives directly shaping this trend through commercial and infrastructure-level decisions.
Artem Skoryi’s contribution to Boosteroid’s development is systemic and measurable. During his tenure, the service grew to over eight million registered users, while the company’s network expanded to more than 28 data centers across Europe, North America, and Latin America. In 2025, his strategic and executive role in building international digital infrastructure was recognized with international professional honors, including the Globee® Awards and the Stevie® Awards.
Boosteroid’s expansion onto the Amazon Fire TV platform, as a continuation of partnerships with Samsung, LG, and Android TV-based devices, demonstrates a consistent integration of the service into leading global consumer ecosystems. The realization of this direction is the result of systematic efforts to scale the company’s proprietary global physical infrastructure, in which Artem Skoryi plays a central role.