Every platform, every method, and the one thing most people skip that makes the whole experience better.
You’ve heard about the Geekzilla Podcast. Maybe someone in a Discord mentioned it, or it came up in a tech forum thread, or you just went looking for something good to listen to while gaming. Either way, you’re here and you want to actually start listening.
Good news: it takes about two minutes to get set up, it’s completely free on every platform, and you don’t need to create an account to start.
Here’s everything you need to know.
First — Is Geekzilla Podcast Actually Free?
Yes. Completely.
Every episode across all platforms is free to stream. There is no premium tier, no paywall, and no “exclusive content behind a subscription.” You just open an app you already have, search for the show, and hit play.
The only thing you might pay is whatever your music or podcast app charges — but Spotify’s free tier, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Amazon Music all let you listen to podcasts at no extra cost.
Where You Can Listen to Geekzilla Podcast
Geekzilla Podcast is available on six major platforms, plus the official website. Here’s each one, explained simply.
1. Spotify — Best for Most People
If you already have Spotify on your phone, this is the easiest option. Spotify is where most people land first, and for good reason: the app is clean, the search works well, and subscribing takes one tap.
How to find it:
- Open Spotify on your phone or computer
- Tap the search icon at the bottom
- Type Geekzilla Podcast in the search bar
- Tap the show when it appears
- Hit “Follow” so new episodes automatically show up in your library
That’s it. Episodes start appearing in your podcast feed every time a new one drops — usually on Thursdays.
One thing worth knowing: Spotify’s free tier includes platform-level ads between songs. Those are Spotify’s ads, not Geekzilla’s. The podcast audio itself is produced without embedded ads. So if you hear an ad, it’s the app — not the show.
2. Apple Podcasts — Best for iPhone Users
If you have an iPhone, Apple Podcasts is already installed on it. You don’t need to download anything. It’s the blue icon with a purple mic — probably buried somewhere in your app library.
How to find it:
- Open Apple Podcasts on your iPhone or iPad
- Tap “Search” at the bottom of the screen
- Type Geekzilla Podcast
- Tap the show
- Hit “Subscribe” — this ensures every new episode automatically downloads to your device
Apple Podcasts is the preferred choice for people who listen offline — on a plane, commute, or somewhere without good signal. Once an episode downloads, it plays without internet.
You can also leave a review on Apple Podcasts, which actually helps the show. If Geekzilla becomes a regular listen for you, leaving a rating takes 30 seconds and genuinely matters for how the show gets discovered by other people.
3. YouTube — Best if You Want to Watch, Not Just Listen
Geekzilla has a YouTube presence specifically for people who prefer watching over listening. Video editions of select episodes appear on the GeekZillaTech YouTube channel — these versions include product footage, trailer clips, and visual context that audio-only can’t deliver.
If you’re watching a tech review episode and the host is comparing two laptops, seeing the actual footage matters. YouTube is the right choice for that kind of content.
How to find it:
- Go to YouTube (app or browser)
- Search Geekzilla Podcast or GeekZillaTech
- Subscribe to the channel so you get notified of uploads
Worth knowing: not every episode gets a video version. The audio-first episodes still live on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. YouTube is a supplement to the main feed, not a replacement for it.
4. Amazon Music — Best for Alexa Users
If you have an Amazon Echo or use Amazon Music as your main streaming app, Geekzilla is available there too.
How to find it:
- Open Amazon Music
- Search for Geekzilla Podcast under podcasts
- Subscribe or follow the show
The big advantage here: Amazon Music integrates with Alexa. You can say “Alexa, play Geekzilla Podcast” and it just works — useful if you’re listening while cooking, working out, or doing something with your hands.
5. Google Podcasts — Best for Android Users Without a Preferred App
Google Podcasts works on any Android device and any browser. If you’re on Android and haven’t found a podcast app you love yet, this is a zero-friction starting point.
How to find it:
- Search Geekzilla Podcast on Google
- The podcast may appear directly in search results with a play button
- Or open Google Podcasts app and search there
- Hit subscribe to follow the show
6. Audible — Best for People Already in the Amazon Ecosystem
Yes, Audible has podcasts too — not just audiobooks. If you already have an Audible subscription for books, you can access Geekzilla Podcast there as well. No separate sign-up required.
7. Geekzilla Website — Best if You Want Episodes + Extra Content Together
The official website at geekzilla hosts every episode alongside written updates, show notes, and fan forums. It’s not just a landing page — it’s a full content hub.
Listening directly on the website is slightly less convenient than an app (no automatic downloads, no offline mode), but the website gives you something the apps don’t: organized fan forums where discussions are sorted by topic. A gaming thread stays separate from a tech thread, which makes it actually usable.
If you’re the kind of person who wants to read more about what an episode covered, or jump into a discussion after listening, the website is worth bookmarking.
8. Smart Speakers — Quick Mention
Geekzilla Podcast is also compatible with smart speakers, including Amazon Alexa and Google Home. If you have one set up in your home or office, you can add it to your listening rotation without touching your phone.
Which Platform Should You Actually Use?
Here’s the honest answer depending on your situation.
You have an iPhone → Use Apple Podcasts. It’s already installed. No download required.
You use Spotify for music → Add Geekzilla on Spotify and keep everything in one app.
You want to watch, not just listen → Start with YouTube. Then add Spotify or Apple Podcasts for episodes that don’t have a video version.
You’re an Amazon / Alexa household → Amazon Music or Audible. Voice commands make it convenient.
You’re on Android with no strong preference → Google Podcasts or Spotify both work well.
You want to join the community too → Visit geekzilla.io. Forums, show notes, and the full episode archive are all there.
How to Never Miss a New Episode?
New episodes drop weekly, usually on Thursdays. Each one runs about 45 to 70 minutes. If you miss a week, they don’t disappear — the back catalog stays available on every platform.
But if you want to stay current without checking manually, subscribing (or following) on your app of choice is the move. Subscribing sends new episode alerts directly to your device. On Spotify, it’s “Follow.” On Apple Podcasts, it’s “Subscribe.” On YouTube, it’s “Subscribe + Bell.” Same idea on every platform — one tap, and the show comes to you.
One Thing Most New Listeners Skip
Here’s something worth knowing that a lot of people miss when they first start listening.
Geekzilla isn’t just one show. It’s a network of nine programs under the geekzilla.io umbrella — each covering a different corner of geek culture. The flagship show covers tech, gaming, and pop culture. But there are also shows dedicated to retro gaming, daily tech news (short episodes, great for commutes), sci-fi and fantasy books, automotive tech, fitness and gaming crossover content, and more.
If you search “Geekzilla Podcast” on Spotify, you’ll find the main show. But once you’re in the app, it’s worth exploring the network to find which program actually fits your interests best.
For new listeners, The Daily Bytes is a good starting point — episodes are short, news-focused, and don’t require any background knowledge to follow. It’s a low-commitment way to get a feel for the show’s tone before committing to a 60-minute deep dive.
Can You Listen Offline?
Yes — if you download the episode first.
On Apple Podcasts, downloaded episodes play without the internet. On Spotify (with a Spotify Premium account), you can download episodes for offline listening. On Google Podcasts and Amazon Music, downloading is also supported.
If you’re about to get on a flight, commute through a tunnel, or just know your signal is spotty, download a couple of episodes beforehand. Most platforms have a download button right next to each episode.
Bottom Line
Listening to Geekzilla Podcast is genuinely as simple as it gets. You don’t need a new account, you don’t need a subscription, and you don’t need to do anything clever. Open whichever app you already use for music or podcasts, search the show name, and follow it. That’s the whole setup.
The harder part is deciding where to start — but that’s a good problem to have.
If you’re not sure, pick an episode topic you already care about. Gaming, AI, movies, retro tech — the show covers all of it, and every episode is self-contained enough that you can jump in anywhere without feeling lost.
“Geekzilla Podcast is free on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music, Audible, YouTube, and geekzilla.io. New episodes drop weekly, typically on Thursdays. No sign-up required on most platforms.”

