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As with previous Games, the Invictus Broadcasting System (SID; Gaullican: Système invictus de diffusion) will serve as the host broadcaster for the 2022 Games. The SID cooperated with the Gaullican public broadcaster, SGRT, to provide broadcasting facilities, personnel and technology for coverage of the Games. The SID licensed broadcasting rights to broadcasters across the world, providing the base feed of video, audio and standardised graphics, with each local broadcaster able to supplement this with their own commentary, presentation and editing.

More than 30,000 hours of television coverage will be produced and distributed by the SID, with a similar amount of hours worth of digital content being produced for online and multimedia services. The SID has set a minimum quota of 50% of televised coverage to be produced in 4K UHD resolution, similar to its production of coverage for the 2020 Winter Invictus Games. In addition, the SID and SGRT will film the Opening and Closing Ceremonies, as well as a select number of event finals, in 8K HDR resolution.

x is the venue for the Invictus Broadcasting Centre (CDI), located in x, Verlois. The SID operates all production and broadcasting feed dissemination from the Centre. The CDI also serves at the hub for broadcasters producing content relating to the Games, including journalists from non-rightsholding broadcasters and organisations.

(feel free to add a paragraph on your country's broadcasting info/rights here, if not you can just add the broadcaster name to the list)

In Hennehouwe, public broadcaster Hennish National Broadcasting (HNO) is the official broadcaster of the Games. HNO will air approximately 36 hours of live, free-to-air content a day across its television and digital networks within Hennehouwe. Primary television coverage will be broadcast on De Tweede, including live 'primetime' events, coverage of events with Hennish participation, daily highlights and studio commentary. Uninterrupted coverage of sports will air on the broadcaster's dedicated sports channel HNO Sport, pop-up channel HNO Sport Extra, and streaming service HNO NU. HNO also launched its first ever 4K channel, HNO UHD, on a temporary basis solely for coverage of the Games. For the first time ever, HNO will sublicense coverage of the Games to a third-party Hennish broadcaster, with full coverage of the esports event being sublicensed to youth-orientated network ONYX.

Broadcasters by country