![]() ![]() Its native aspect ratio of 16:9 looked great, but it also supports 2.40:1 and 4:3. I kept the picture at about 100 inches with the projector about 10 feet away from the screen for the bulk of my testing, sitting it atop a tall bookshelf. Related: Forget Buying a New TV, This Is Why You Need a Projector It never looked dull or over-saturated at any point. It also supports both HDR-10 and HDR-PRO tone-mapping technology, so colors will look incredibly vivid and accurate regardless of whether you're playing Fall Guys online with your friends or watching a dimly-lit scene in literally any fantasy TV show. It covers 100% of DCI-P3-the modern color standardization protocol used for modern monitors and video games with a broader range of colors than sRGB-with the wide color gamut setting toggled. BenQ is known for creating projectors with excellent color accuracy out of the box, and this projector is no exception. Perhaps the only thing more remarkable than the X3000i's brightness is its impressive color accuracy. It's bright enough to comfortably use mid-day or in a room with overhead lights on though I'd recommend sticking with dimmer ambient lighting (or none) for the best picture results. And where many projectors end up trading brightness for color accuracy, I never found that to be a problem with this model. BenQ added a fourth blue LED pump inside, which boosts the brightness this projector clocks in at a solid 3,000 ANSI lumens (with a contrast ratio of 500,000:1), making all the difference. Thanks to its 4LED lamp system, the X3000i is much brighter than projectors with a 3LED system. Buttons were large, easy to press, responsive, and I didn't feel like any were missing. There's a dedicated button for Prime Video, Google Assistant, D-pad navigation, volume/mute, home, back, settings, and the general projector menu. The included slim remote control offers up buttons for both the projector and navigating the Android TV interface. It also comes with adjustable feet, hardware for mounting the projector upside down (for those who want that), a power cord, and remote batteries. I love that BenQ threw in an Android TV adapter instead of opting for a built-in OS that may potentially get sluggish with age plus the adapter can be replaced with newer versions in future models. It's a teeny hassle, but you only need to do it once, and it only takes a few seconds. You will need to undo two screws and remove the top of the projector before you can plug in the pocket-knife-sized adapter, though, as there's a dedicated slot for it in there. ![]() The projector ships with an Android TV wireless adapter. ![]() Connectivity: Bluetooth 4.2, 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac (2.4G/5G), Google Chromecast (via included Android adapter).Inputs/Outputs: 2x HDMI 2.0b, USB Type A-1, 3.5mm Mini Jack, RS-232 in (DB-9 pin), DC 12V Trigger (3.5mm Jack), Optical Audio out. ![]()
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