In the small, rain-slicked town of Patterdale, old Elias Thorne was known for three things: his antique radio repair shop, his profound dislike for the internet, and his obsession with a single, crumbling piece of paper.
That paper was his Digi TV channel list.
Years ago, when the world switched from analog to digital, the government had issued a basic decoder and a laminated card. Most people threw the card away. But Elias, a man who believed in order, kept his. He had even annotated it in faded blue ink. Channel 4: Weather (Mr. Kemper’s forecast is always wrong). Channel 11: News (too much shouting). Channel 22: Classic Films (the only honest channel).
Every evening at six o’clock, he would sit in his worn leather chair, the static crackle of the old digital box filling the silence. He would consult his list, navigate to Channel 22, and watch a black-and-white western. It was a ritual. It was safety.
Then, the glitch happened.
One Tuesday, Channel 22 showed not a John Wayne film, but a live feed of a living room he didn’t recognize. A dusty bookshelf. A clock that read 3:00 AM. A woman in a yellow dress crying silently.
Elias frowned. He checked his list. Channel 22: Classic Films. He turned the box off and on. Nothing changed. He flipped to Channel 4 for the weather. Instead, he saw the same room, the same crying woman. Channel 11? The woman. Channel 7, the music station? A faint, distorted orchestra played as the woman stared directly into the camera.
For the first time in a decade, Elias unfolded the original Digi TV channel list that came with the decoder. The official one, not his annotated copy. It had a tiny footnote he’d never noticed before: digi tv channel list
Channel 0: Emergency Broadcast & Missing Persons Feed. Not for public use.
He had never pressed Channel 0. But now, every channel was Channel 0.
That night, unable to sleep, he picked up his antique rotary phone—one of the few things that still worked without the internet—and called the number on the back of the decoder. A tired voice answered: "National Recovery Bureau, Missing Persons Division."
"I think my TV is broken," Elias whispered. "There's a woman. Yellow dress. Crying."
A long pause. Then: "What's the serial number on the bottom of your Digi box?"
Elias read it out. He heard furious typing.
"Mr. Thorne, that decoder was reported lost in transit fourteen years ago. That's not a live feed. That's a playback. A loop. The woman you're seeing—she went missing the same week your box was shipped. We thought the signal was destroyed." In the small, rain-slicked town of Patterdale, old
Elias looked at his TV. The woman had stopped crying. She was holding up a handwritten sign. It read: HELP ME. CHANNEL 22 USED TO BE SAFE.
Slowly, Elias picked up his laminated channel list. He crossed out Classic Films. He wrote a new note in shaky red ink: Channel All: A Prison.
The next morning, the town found him in his shop, surrounded by dismantled decoders. He was soldering a homemade antenna the size of a dinner plate. When the mayor asked what he was doing, Elias simply held up his Digi TV channel list.
On the back, he had drawn a single new channel: Channel 99: Truth.
And for the first time, he smiled. "Just trying to find a better signal," he said. "One that isn't on the list."
Here’s a helpful overview of Digi TV (the Romanian pay-TV provider) and how to find or understand its channel list.
Since Digi (RCS & RDS) frequently updates packages, channel numbers, and adds/removes channels, the most accurate list is always on their official site. Below is a guide to the structure, categories, and how to access the full list. Channel 0: Emergency Broadcast & Missing Persons Feed
Because Digi’s native TV offering is small, many customers confuse it with satellite or OTT apps that are merely billed through Digi. Here are three legitimate add-ons:
For viewers seeking educational content, nature, and history.
Because the Digi Smart Box runs on Android TV, your channel list is not limited to what Digi sells you. You can install third-party apps from the Google Play Store to supplement your lineup:
A: Yes. CelcomDigi’s official website has a downloadable PDF brochure titled "Digi TV Channel Lineup." You can also chat with their customer service bot to request the latest Excel/PDF list.
In Q4 of 2025, CelcomDigi announced a major partnership with Disney+ Hotstar and Netflix. While these are not "live channels," they are now integrated into the Digi Smart Box’s universal search. If you search for a movie, the box will show you if it is on a live Digi TV channel or on your connected Netflix account.
Furthermore, rumors suggest that by late 2026, Digi will launch "Cloud PVR" (Personal Video Recorder), allowing you to "record" up to 50 hours of live TV from the channel list directly to the cloud.
Introduction: What is Digi TV?
If you are a subscriber to Digi Telecommunications in Malaysia, you may have heard of "Digi TV" – but confusion often arises because Digi does not operate a traditional cable or satellite TV service like Astro or Unifi TV. Instead, Digi TV refers to the collection of streaming and linear television channels available through specific postpaid plans, broadband bundles, or the Digi Channel app (now integrated with MyDigi).
Since the merger between Digi and Celcom to form CelcomDigi, the television landscape has shifted. This article provides the most current Digi TV channel list, explains how to access it, and compares it to other services.