BenQ GP520 vs Nebula Capsule 3: 2,600 Lumens or a Battery
One puts 2,600 lumens of 4K on your wall. The other fits in a bag and runs 2.5 hours on battery. At 8x the brightness gap, this isn't really a spec fight.
The Three Best 4K Triple-Laser Projectors, Ranked
The three flagship all-in-one triple-lasers, all within $400. They measure nearly identical brightness. Contrast, lens shift, and 240Hz are what actually split them.
BenQ W5800 vs Anker Nebula X1: What $2,800 More Doesn't Buy
The $4,999 cinema projector has a better lens and real lens shift. The $2,199 all-in-one has deeper blacks, more lumens, apps, and speakers. An honest look.
Anker Nebula X1 vs Hisense PX3-Pro: Long-Throw or Laser TV?
The X1 measures brighter, costs $1,300 less, and needs no screen. The PX3-Pro sits inches from the wall. This is a room-shape decision, not a spec one.
Hisense PX3-Pro vs PT1: Is the Laser TV Upgrade Worth $1,300?
Same RGB-laser engine, same HDR formats, $1,300 apart. The PX3-Pro buys you 700 lumens and 240Hz Xbox gaming. Whether that's worth it depends on your curtains.
Hisense C2 Ultra vs XGIMI Horizon 20 Max: $100 Apart, Same Picture
Two bright triple-laser 4K projectors, $100 apart, measuring within 11 lumens of each other. The real split: lens shift and Google TV vs a JBL subwoofer.
Anker Nebula X1 vs XGIMI Horizon 20 Max: Contrast vs Placement
XGIMI claims 5,700 lumens, Anker claims 3,500 — calibrated, they measure the same. What actually separates them is 4x contrast versus real lens shift.
Anker Nebula X1 vs Hisense C2 Ultra: Black Level Decides It
Both hit ~3,000 measured lumens and 110% BT.2020. The X1 has 4x the native contrast; the C2 Ultra has 240Hz gaming and JBL sound. How to pick, by room.
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