THIS WEEK AT OXFORD PRIVATE STUDIOS – OPS RADIO SHARPENS ITS PLATFORM, EXPANDS ITS CATALOGUE, AND OPENS THE DOOR TO 12 MONTHS OF MYTHIC ACCESS

Oxford Private Studios has entered a new phase of work on OPS Radio, with the latest round of updates focused less on headline spectacle and more on the serious operational improvements needed to turn a growing radio product into a dependable music ecosystem. This week’s changes reach across the Xbox player, the OPS Radio website, library playlists, artist rotation, upcoming releases, and the wider listener experience. It is the kind of week that shows the amount of infrastructure now sitting behind the platform. OPS Radio is no longer being treated as a simple listening page. It is being refined as a cross-platform music environment where listeners can tune in, follow new releases, build familiarity with OPS creatives, and use the app as a direct gateway into the House of Music.

Silent Indictment is now officially set for release on 19 June 2026 and has entered OPS Radio rotation ahead of its release date. This early rotation matters because OPS is increasingly using OPS Radio as the first point of discovery for its catalogue. Rather than relying only on external platforms to surface new music after release, OPS Radio allows songs to gather attention before they arrive more widely. Listeners can hear the record now, form early attachments to the sound, and follow the project before the formal release campaign reaches its next stage. This is part of a wider shift inside Oxford Private Studios, where music is no longer being sent out into crowded digital spaces without a home of its own. It is being introduced through a platform built to support it, repeat it, explain it, and keep it alive.

The Vault has also received significant attention this week following feedback from users. Oxford Private Studios wants to thank listeners who took the time to share their experience, because that feedback has now fed directly into the next round of improvements. A new update is rolling out to improve the OPS Radio Xbox player and library playlist experience, with work focused on making the console environment more practical, smoother, and more suited to long listening sessions. Xbox is a different kind of environment from mobile or web. It is built around large screens, longer engagement, and lean-back listening. For that reason, the player, playlist structure, and library flow need to feel natural on television rather than simply copied from a smaller device. This week’s update moves the Xbox version further in that direction.

The OPS Radio website has also changed substantially. The updates are broad enough that almost every major surface of opsradio.app has been affected in some way. The work includes visual refinement, listener pathways, platform messaging, navigation, catalogue access, and clearer routes toward the wider OPS Radio experience. This is important because the website remains the main public entry point for many listeners. It has to explain the product quickly, carry the brand properly, direct users to the right platform, and make the value of OPS Radio clear without requiring the listener to understand the full internal roadmap. The updated website is now better aligned with the direction of the app, the Xbox experience, the Vault, the library structure, and the wider expansion of OPS Radio as a music platform.

Tahlia Vybz has now officially joined OPS Radio rotation. Her addition strengthens the catalogue and gives listeners another reason to stay connected to the station cycle. OPS Radio is built around the principle that music needs repetition, context, and placement before it can build loyalty. Adding Tahlia Vybz to rotation is not only a catalogue update. It is a signal that OPS will continue using its own platform to introduce audiences to its creative vehicles in a more intentional way. Listeners should expect more music to enter rotation as the platform continues to grow and as OPS begins publishing weekly updates on what has been added, what is moving, and what deserves attention across the stations.

This week also carries a major listener offer. OPS Radio is now pushing the free 12-month OPS Mythic Bundle access campaign, giving early users a full year of Mythic access without paying the usual £9.99 per month price. For anyone watching the platform grow from the outside, this is the moment to come in early. The Mythic Bundle is being used to reward early adoption, encourage testing across supported platforms, and give listeners a deeper experience of the OPS Radio ecosystem while the product continues expanding. A year of access at no cost is not a small trial. It is a serious opening offer designed to let users experience more of what OPS Radio is becoming before the platform matures into its full commercial model.

That offer should matter to listeners because OPS Radio is moving quickly. The platform is no longer limited to a single web experience. It is growing across Xbox, web, PC, Android, and connected environments, with more development continuing behind the scenes. Early users are not only getting access to music. They are helping shape the direction of the product. Every download, every station play, every request, every playlist interaction, and every piece of feedback helps Oxford Private Studios understand what listeners value most. That information affects what gets improved, what gets released earlier, what gets prioritised, and how the platform grows over time.

The call to action is therefore simple. Download the OPS Radio app, visit opsradio.app, claim the free 12-month Mythic Bundle while it is available, and start using the platform now rather than waiting until the ecosystem is already crowded. Early access gives listeners the best position in the movement. It gives them the chance to hear records before wider release, test features while they are still evolving, and support OPS creatives through a platform built specifically to give their music a home. OPS Radio is not asking listeners to watch from a distance. It is inviting them to step inside the build while the foundations are still being shaped.

For Oxford Private Studios, this week shows the difference between a launch and a living platform. A launch announces that something exists. A living platform keeps changing, keeps fixing, keeps listening, keeps adding music, and keeps widening access. The latest updates to the Xbox player, library playlists, website surfaces, Vault experience, artist rotation, and Mythic access campaign all point in the same direction. OPS Radio is being built as a music home with room to grow, room to listen, and room for its audience to influence what comes next.

OPS Radio is available now.

Download the app. Visit opsradio.app. Claim the free 12-month Mythic Bundle while the offer remains available.

OPS Radio.

House of Music.

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