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Why the Knicks vs. Pacers on Prime Video Holds Up
Prime Video's live NBA coverage brings Knicks vs. Pacers directly into the streaming stack most households already pay for — a genuinely convenient answer for cord-cutters who want playoff basketball without a cable bill.
The question of where to watch Knicks vs. Pacers has a cleaner answer than it did even two years ago. Prime Video has quietly become a legitimate destination for live NBA playoff basketball, and for the cord-cutter crowd, that shift carries real weight.
What makes the Prime Video option worth understanding is context. Amazon's NBA deal isn't a full-season broadcast arrangement — it's a curated slate of games, which means high-profile matchups like a Knicks-Pacers playoff series are exactly the kind of content that ends up on the platform. The games that draw search traffic are often the games Prime Video has rights to show.
The practical case for this setup is straightforward. If a household already pays for Prime — and a substantial portion of U.S. households do — there's no incremental cost to watch. The game appears in the sports tab, you click play, and you're watching. That simplicity is underrated. The sports streaming landscape has fragmented badly over the past decade, and anything that reduces the credential-juggling deserves credit.
For the fan who wants to understand the full picture: Prime Video works best as a complement to other sources, not a replacement. Dedicated NBA followers will still want League Pass or a live TV bundle for the games that fall outside Amazon's schedule. But for a marquee matchup between two of the league's most historically loaded franchises, Prime Video delivers a broadcast that holds up — and does so through infrastructure most people already have installed on their television.
The Knicks-Pacers rivalry has enough history and enough present-tense tension to justify seeking out the best possible viewing setup. Prime Video, for the games it carries, clears that bar comfortably.