🎬 Elevate your entertainment game with Epson’s brightest, smartest mini projector yet!
The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF21 is a portable smart laser projector featuring 1000 lumens brightness, true Full HD 1080p HDR with 3-chip 3LCD technology, and built-in Google TV for seamless streaming access to over 10,000 apps. Its compact design and proprietary EpiqSense tech enable quick setup and projection up to 150", complemented by Dolby stereo speakers for immersive audio. Ideal for home theaters, outdoor parties, and gaming, it offers a maintenance-free 20,000-hour laser light source and a 2-year warranty.
Brand Name | Epson |
Item Weight | 5.3 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 7.5 x 7.7 x 4.4 inches |
Item model number | V11HB35020 |
Color Name | White |
Special Features | Portable |
G**O
Proyector
Es muy buen producto 👌
A**R
Awesome
Excellent.
C**R
Excelente producto
Tiene una calidad de imagen excelente y el sonido es muy bueno
D**Z
Cumple lo que ofrece
Ha sido una buena compra. El sistema de google TV está bien. Es cumplidor, cumple lo que ofrece.
C**G
epson ef21 1080 projector
bought elsewhere .couple of quick notes.best clarity , do this.set sharness to 0 , thenadjust focus as best you can.( text still a little fuzzy )now increase sharpness to 12 +- .the clarity should look very nice at 120 inch.keep zoom at 0 ,... No zoom .zoom for max size.set projector at about 9 feet for 120 inch , no zoom.best audio,run roku , video source to soundbar,then soundbar out to projector
J**S
Great Picture, Terrible Brain
If I could give this 3.5 stars, I would. Let’s start with the good: the image quality is solid. I’ve got this projector set up at the edge of my bed, blasting about a 100-inch picture across the room (no, I didn’t measure—this isn’t a lab, it’s a bedroom). It even has a little built-in kickstand so you can tilt it up without needing to MacGyver a book stack underneath. Nice touch.The rear-facing speaker? Not bad at all. It points toward you as you watch, and the sound is pretty decent for built-in audio. But—and this is where things get weird—I somehow thought I’d be able to connect this to my Bluetooth speakers. You know, like a Sonos setup? Nope. Not happening. Turns out the projector is the speaker. You can play music on it with the screen off. Yay… $600 to turn your projector into a glorified Bluetooth boombox.Now let’s talk about the OS 🙄😒.Boot time is fine—about 30 seconds—but once you’re in, it’s like trying to run a marathon in quicksand. I’ve never been a fan of Google TV on anything that isn’t a TV, and this only confirms it. The interface is painfully slow. Press the autofocus button? Sometimes it works. Sometimes it pauses your movie. Sometimes it just… thinks about it. Every action has lag. Want to change the picture settings? Go grab a snack while it loads. There’s technically a dedicated picture settings button, which is cute, but navigating it feels like trying to tune a piano underwater.If you’re like me—someone who paid this much for a projector—you probably care about fine-tuning the visuals. You probably thought you’d be getting something snappy for this price. You’d be wrong. OS performance? D-minus. Not unlivable, just deeply frustrating.So yeah. Great image. Pretty good sound. Terrible interface. Would I return it? No. Am I annoyed by it regularly? Yes. It’s a 3.5-star experience in a 5-star price tag.
R**R
Better than many of the 4K projectors on the market...
The first reason to get this projector is for the laser technology, because it makes the picture much brighter than LED projectors, while rendering the sharpest color contrast possible. You also get very good optics, thereby shortening the throw distance to provide a massive screen size up to "150.The smart features are another reason to get this projector. Everything is properly licensed, and you'll get future updates to the operating system thanks to Epson. The same cannot be said for off branded projectors. The number of apps is virtually unlimited. And best of all, the most important are included: Netflix, Prime, Youtube, etc.The setup can be cumbersome. And you'll want to be close to your wifi router, because this device struggles to get a good signal. This seems to be a common theme with Epson, so just be aware of that. If you have a good wifi signal in the room, and you like using QR codes for setup, then setup will be a breeze.The sound is ok in a pinch, but if you're using this for home theater, then external speakers are the way to go. And since this has a very bright laser light source, it has a built in safety protection that dims the projector when something (somebody) gets in the way, to prevent blinding small children. That's a great feature to have, and a must have feature for a projector that carries this level of brightness.The heat generation is less than comparably bright projectors that use incandescent lamps that burn out every few years. Thus, the fan noise is much less, too. Should you get this, or spend an extra $1,600 to get a 4K projector that is comparable in brightness and features? That's a difficult call to make, but considering that you're not likely to notice much difference between 1080p and 2160P resolution, I'd get this projector and plan to upgrade in about 5 years. Indeed, this projector is better than any of the low end 4K projector's that you'll find on the market.
I**N
Not a fully baked product
First impressions of the projector are good. It's a nice looking compact unit without an external power supply. The experience after the initial unboxing, however, is terrible. First, the projector will need an update. This takes well over an hour and requires the projector to be fully powered on. Once updated, the android OS continues to update in the background for another 10-15 minutes during which time the OS is practically unusable, and notifications pop up continuously to let you know this.Once the update is fully complete, basic functions such as changing brightness completely stop any media, and accessing any other settings is accompanied by considerable lag. Although the remote pairs the first time you power the unit on, it will continue to ask to pair every time you turn it on.As for the image, it occupies a strange middle ground - certainly not bright enough to be used with any ambient light, yet when the room is completely dark any black parts of the image are completely grey. Colors are acceptable but not anywhere near a modern mid range TV.So with below average image and contrast, terribly laggy OS, and constant remote connectivity issues, I would say to avoid. I typically trust Epson products and have owned several of their printers and projectors, but this is the first product I've purchased in many years that feels like it wasn't adequately tested or finished developing.
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