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World of Software > Computing > This device is quietly replacing living room TVs, and I finally get why
Computing

This device is quietly replacing living room TVs, and I finally get why

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Last updated: 2025/10/09 at 6:55 PM
News Room Published 9 October 2025
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For years, the TV was the centerpiece of the living room. Everything bent around it. You bought couches to face it, measured walls to fit it, and lived with that big black rectangle looming in the corner even when it wasn’t doing anything. However, lately, I’ve been noticing a shift. More people are actually skipping the living-room TV altogether. This is not for some sci-fi headsets or paper-thin OLEDs glued to the wall, but for projectors. Portable projectors, to be precise.

They aren’t the clunky, dim, conference-room machines you remember from school assemblies. They’re compact boxes that fit in a backpack, beam out screens up to 120 inches, run some good streaming apps worth paying for without a separate box, and even sound decent.

From Pico toys to full-blown TV replacements

Projectors finally left the toy aisle

Credit: BASIC thinking / YouTube

That first generation of so-called portable projectors was mostly smoke and mirrors. Think back to those little “pico projectors” you could plug into an iPod or early smartphone. They barely lit up a wall, and half the time, you were squinting just to tell if an image was even there.

Skip ahead to today, and it feels like a different universe. Now you can pick up pocket-sized LED cubes that run Android TV or Roku OS, capsule-shaped models with batteries and speakers built right in, or those wild ultra-short-throw laser units that sit a few inches from the wall and still blast out a theater-sized picture.

In short, what used to be a toy has matured into a genuine television replacement.

Portability changes the whole living room equation

Oh, the joy of moving your screen like a lamp, not a shrine

Once you stop treating the TV like a piece of furniture, the whole vibe of a living room shifts. A 65-inch OLED is a statement no matter how you slice it. A portable projector, on the other hand, can vanish into a drawer as soon as you are done watching. We have highlighted several great options worth considering in our buying guide.

That little bit of portability unlocks situations a TV could never pull off. If you live in an apartment, you can win back wall space instead of letting a giant rectangle dominate the room. Families can shuffle movie night between the couch, the bedroom, or even the backyard under the stars. As a traveler, you can throw one in a bag and make a bland hotel wall become a theater, adding it to the growing list of essential gadgets for travel.

Even if you use it in a fixed setup, a projector changes the way a room works. You are no longer forced to orbit around a black slab. The space can breathe, and the screen only comes out when you want it.

Brightness, sound, and smarts finally caught up

Projectors grew teeth, lungs, and a brain

The Freestyle 2nd Gen by Samsung. Credit: Samsung

Of course, none of this philosophical talk would matter if the projectors themselves weren’t up to the job. What has made this shift possible is a quiet revolution in the guts of these devices.

Brightness is the most visible change. Laser and LED light engines now pump out thousands of lumens, enough to make images watchable in ordinary living rooms without blackout curtains. The days when you needed a pitch-black basement to enjoy a projector are fading. While no projector can compete with direct sunlight, the fact that you can watch comfortably in a lit space makes them viable as everyday TVs.

Sound, long the Achilles’ heel, has also improved. Manufacturers have stopped treating audio as an afterthought. Partnerships with brands like Bose, JBL, Yamaha, and Harman Kardon have raised the baseline, producing integrated sound that actually fills a room. Many units also support HDMI eARC or Bluetooth, making it painless to add a soundbar or speaker system. This encourages modularity—image here, sound there—so you can refine each element to your taste.

Projector

Audio Brand Partner

Details

Epson Lifestudio series

Bose

Epson has launched its Lifestudio line of projectors, which it co-developed with Bose. The projectors are tagged “Sound by Bose,” and they come with a custom-designed audio system by Bose built in. Models include portable, lifestyle, and ultra-short-throw (UST) units.

ViewSonic M1X

Harman Kardon

This portable LED projector includes built-in Harman Kardon speakers. It is quite portable, has battery support, and is clearly marketed for image and audio performance.

Yaber

JBL

Yaber has multiple lines (K2s, K3, etc.) that include “Sound by JBL” audio systems. The JBL speaker modules are custom-tuned, sometimes featuring passive radiators for enhanced bass, dual-speaker setups, and more.

Epson EpiqVision EF-12 (EpiqVision Mini)

Yamaha

The EF-12/EpiqVision Mini explicitly markets “Sound by Yamaha”—Yamaha-designed drivers and DSP tuned for fuller built-in audio.

The last piece of the puzzle is smarts. Modern projectors are no longer dumb lenses waiting for an HDMI cable. They now run good full-on TV operating systems like Roku TV, Google TV, or custom shells that bundle streaming apps, voice assistants, and even cloud gaming services to stream video games. Samsung’s Freestyle Gen 2, for example, can stream Xbox titles without a console nearby, which still feels kind of absurd in the best way. Add in autofocus, auto-keystone, and the near-instant alignment tricks they pull off, and you’ll find that pointing a projector at a wall feels almost magical compared to the fiddly, patience-testing setups projectors used to demand.

Sometimes the best display is no display at all

Portable projectors are not destined to replace televisions for everyone. If you’re the kind of sports fan who needs the brightest possible picture at noon, or a gamer who lives and dies by split-second reflexes, a traditional screen is still the safer bet. But for the growing number of viewers who mostly stream films and series, crave flexibility, and prefer a living space less defined by a looming screen, portable projectors now present a persuasive alternative.

I am not quite ready to retire my television, but I see the attraction more clearly than ever before. The real question is no longer whether projectors can replace the living room. For many people, they already have.

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