Plasmonic nanostructures and metasurfaces are appealing hosts for investigation of novel optical devices and exploration of new frontiers in physical/optical processes and materials research. Recent studies have shown that these structures hold the promise of greater control over the optical and electronic properties of quantum emitters, offering a unique horizon for ultra-fast spin-controlled optical devices, quantum computation, laser systems, and sensitive photodetectors. In this Perspective, we discuss how heterostructures consisting of metal oxides, metallic nanoantennas, and dielectrics can offer a material platform wherein one can use the decay of plasmons and their near fields to passivate the defect sites of semiconductor quantum dots while enhancing their radiative decay rates. Such a platform, called functional metal-oxide plasmonic metasubstrates (FMOPs), relies on formation of two junctions at very close vicinity of each other. These include an Au/Si Schottky junction and an Si/Al oxide charge barrier. Such a double junction allows one to use hot electrons to generate a field-passivation effect, preventing migration of photo-excited electrons from quantum dots to the defect sites. Prospects of FMOP, including impact of enhancement exciton-plasmon coupling, collective transport of excitation energy, and suppression of quantum dot fluorescence blinking, are discussed. © 2023 Author(s).