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Big-screen budget battle: WiMiUS power vs VOPLLS smart portability

If you’re choosing between these two portable projectors, you’re really deciding what kind of movie night you want. Product A leans hard into raw projection specs, flexibility and a bigger cinematic canvas, while Product B focuses on a slimmer design, smart-app convenience and a lower price. Both promise easy setup and bedroom-to-garden versatility, but they suit very different buyers. Here’s the definitive breakdown so you can buy once and buy right.

Our Pick【Auto Focus & Keystone】Projector, 38000 Lumen WiFi 6 Bluetooth Full HD 1080P Portable Projector Supported 4K, 4D/4P Keystone 50% Zoom 300"Display Home Cinema Projectors for Smartphone/TV Stick/PPT/PS5

【Auto Focus & Keystone】Projector, 38000 Lumen WiFi 6 Bluetooth Full HD 1080P Portable Projector Supported 4K, 4D/4P Keystone 50% Zoom 300"Display Home Cinema Projectors for Smartphone/TV Stick/PPT/PS5

£219.994.7 (2,341)
【Officially-Licensed APP & Thinnest Design】Mini Projector 4K with Auto Focus & Keystone, VOPLLS 600ANSI WiFi Bluetooth 1080P FHD Portable Projector, Smart Moive Projectors for Bedroom/Outdoor/Phone

【Officially-Licensed APP & Thinnest Design】Mini Projector 4K with Auto Focus & Keystone, VOPLLS 600ANSI WiFi Bluetooth 1080P FHD Portable Projector, Smart Moive Projectors for Bedroom/Outdoor/Phone

£169.994.4 (1,586)

Our Recommendation

Product A is the definitive pick because it offers the stronger home cinema spec sheet, the higher customer rating, and the more flexible setup tools. Its 4D/4P keystone, 50% zoom, WiFi 6 and claimed 300-inch display make it the better all-round projector for movies and gaming. Product B is attractive for its lower price and slimmer body, but it looks and feels more like the compromise option.

Detailed Comparison

Display

Product A wins here on paper and, for most buyers, in practice. WiMiUS claims 38,000 lumens, Full HD 1080p, support for 4K input, 4D/4P keystone and a 300-inch display size. That combination points to a projector built for maximum flexibility and a bigger-feeling home cinema experience, especially if you want to fill a large wall or screen. Product B offers 600 ANSI lumens, 1080p FHD output and 4K support, which is a more grounded and more believable brightness spec than the headline-grabbing figure on Product A, but it is still the dimmer option overall. In a dark room, both should deliver enjoyable images, but Product A is the better choice if you want a larger, more cinema-like picture and more adjustment freedom. Winner: Product A.

Performance

Product A again has the edge for sheer feature depth. Auto focus, 4D/4P keystone, 50% zoom and WiFi 6 suggest a projector designed to make setup easier and streaming smoother, especially when you’re moving it between rooms or using it with a TV stick, PS5 or laptop. Product B also includes auto focus and keystone, plus Bluetooth and WiFi, but its core spec sheet is simpler and its 600 ANSI brightness means it is likely to be more dependent on a dark environment for best results. For gaming and general movie use, both are portable projectors rather than serious daylight machines, but Product A’s broader adjustment tools make it easier to get a properly squared, sharp image in more rooms. Winner: Product A.

Build quality and design

This is the one area where Product B takes the win. VOPLLS markets it as a “thinnest design” mini projector, and that usually translates into a more compact, easier-to-carry unit that feels better suited to bedrooms, small flats and occasional travel. Product A is more of a feature-packed home cinema box: likely larger, less discreet, and built to prioritise projection versatility over sleekness. If you want a projector that looks and feels like a neat lifestyle device, Product B is the cleaner design choice. Winner: Product B.

Battery life

Neither product listing provides a battery specification, so this category is effectively a draw. Based on the product types, both appear to be mains-powered portable projectors rather than true battery projectors, so you should expect to plug them in for movie nights, gaming sessions and presentations. If battery-free portability matters, you’ll need to check the exact model details before buying. Winner: Tie.

Price and value for money

Product B wins on value if your priority is spending less upfront. At £169.99, it is £50 cheaper than Product A, and it also carries the lower-risk appeal of a simpler, slimmer mini projector with smart-app positioning. That said, Product A’s higher 4.7/5 rating from 2,341 reviews versus Product B’s 4.4/5 from 1,586 reviews suggests stronger owner satisfaction, which matters when you’re buying a projector that should ideally work well every time you switch it on. If you want the best bargain, B is cheaper; if you want the stronger overall package, A justifies the extra money. Winner: Product B for budget, Product A for overall value. Overall category winner: Product A.

Game library/features

Neither projector has a game library in the sense of a smart streaming device with native apps and built-in content ecosystems, so this category is really about features for games and media. Product A looks better for console use thanks to WiFi 6, broader connectivity language, 4D/4P keystone and 50% zoom, which should make it easier to dial in a PS5 setup in a spare room or lounge. Product B’s officially licensed app angle may be attractive if you want quick access to streaming apps without extra dongles, but the listing is more focused on smart convenience than gaming flexibility. For a PS5, TV stick or laptop, Product A is the more versatile entertainment hub. Winner: Product A.

Overall user experience

Product A feels like the more complete home cinema projector. The combination of higher-rated user feedback, more advanced image correction, bigger projected size and stronger all-round flexibility makes it the safer buy for people who want a proper big-screen setup with fewer compromises. Product B is easier to recommend for buyers who want something smaller, cheaper and more stylish for a bedroom or casual outdoor use, especially if smart-app convenience matters more than maximum cinematic punch. But when you weigh up the whole experience — image control, setup flexibility, review confidence and home-theatre ambition — Product A is the one that feels more like a true movie-night machine. Overall summary: Product A is the better projector for most people, while Product B is the better compact budget pick.

Overall verdict: buy Product A if you want the more capable, more cinema-focused projector with stronger user ratings and better all-round flexibility. Buy Product B only if saving £50 and getting the slimmer design are your top priorities.

Buy the 【Auto Focus & if...

Buy Product A if you want the best chance of a true big-screen cinema feel in a dark lounge, spare room or garden setup. It is also the better choice if you’ll be connecting a PS5, TV stick or laptop and want more image-adjustment flexibility. The higher rating and larger review base add confidence if you want a safer long-term buy.

Buy the 【Officially-Licensed APP & if...

Buy Product B if your priority is keeping the cost down and you want a slimmer projector for a bedroom or occasional portable use. It makes sense if you value the officially licensed app angle and don’t need the biggest possible image or the most advanced correction tools. It’s the more compact, more budget-friendly choice for casual viewing.

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