Big-screen cinema on a budget: WiMiUS 1200ANSI takes on VOPLLS 700ANSI

If you’re choosing between these two smart portable projectors, you’re really deciding between raw picture power and a more premium-priced alternative with a smaller light engine. Both promise auto focus, keystone correction, WiFi 6, Bluetooth and built-in streaming convenience, so they’re aimed at people who want an easy home cinema without the faff of extra boxes. The key question is simple: which one gives you the better movie night for your money in a UK bedroom, lounge or garden setup? Let’s break it down properly.

Our Pick【Netflix Included/Dolby Audio】Smart 4K Projector,1200ANSI FHD 1080P Portable Projector,HDR10 Short Throw Auto Focus/Keystone WiFi6 Bluetooth 50% Zoom Home Cinema Projectors for Bedroom,Outdoor,Gifts

【Netflix Included/Dolby Audio】Smart 4K Projector,1200ANSI FHD 1080P Portable Projector,HDR10 Short Throw Auto Focus/Keystone WiFi6 Bluetooth 50% Zoom Home Cinema Projectors for Bedroom,Outdoor,Gifts

£189.994.7 (6,057)
【Officially-Licensed APP & Dolby Audio】Smart 4K Projector, Auto Focus & Keystone, VOPLLS 700 ANSI Full HD 1080P WiFi 6 Bluetooth Portable Projector, 60Hz Home Cinema Projectors for iOS/Android/Outdoor

【Officially-Licensed APP & Dolby Audio】Smart 4K Projector, Auto Focus & Keystone, VOPLLS 700 ANSI Full HD 1080P WiFi 6 Bluetooth Portable Projector, 60Hz Home Cinema Projectors for iOS/Android/Outdoor

£259.994.3 (3,556)

Our Recommendation

Product A is the definitive pick because it offers the stronger core cinema spec: 1200 ANSI brightness, HDR10 and a lower £189.99 price. That combination should deliver a more vivid picture and better value than Product B’s 700 ANSI output at £259.99. Both are easy to set up, but WiMiUS gives you more of what matters for movie night without stretching your budget. For most buyers, it is the smarter and more satisfying purchase.

Detailed Comparison

Display

Product A wins clearly on image output. WiMiUS claims 1200 ANSI lumens and HDR10 support, while Product B is rated at 700 ANSI lumens. In real-world terms, that’s a meaningful gap: Product A should look brighter in daylight spill, hold up better for outdoor evenings, and give more punch on larger screens. Both are Full HD 1080P projectors with 4K input support, but brightness is what determines whether that detail actually pops. For mixed lighting and bigger-screen viewing, Product A is the stronger cinema pick.

Performance

Again, Product A has the edge. The higher 1200 ANSI rating should translate into better perceived contrast and more usable image size, especially if you’re projecting beyond a modest bedroom wall. Both offer auto focus and keystone correction, which makes setup easy, and both support WiFi 6 and Bluetooth for modern wireless use. Product B’s 60Hz spec is fine for movies and streaming, but it doesn’t compensate for the lower brightness. If you want the projector to feel more capable across films, sport and general TV, Product A is the more convincing performer.

Build quality and design

This is closer, but Product B has a small advantage on brand positioning and likely polish. VOPLLS markets this model as an officially licensed app projector, which suggests a more curated software experience, and its £259.99 price point implies a slightly more premium presentation. That said, the core hardware features are broadly similar: portable form factor, auto focus, keystone correction and wireless connectivity. Product A still feels like the smarter engineering choice because it packs more brightness and HDR10 into a cheaper package, but if you value a more premium-feeling ecosystem, Product B has a slight design-and-software edge.

Battery life

Neither product appears to include a built-in battery, so this category is effectively a tie. Both are mains-powered portable projectors, which means they’re designed for plug-in use at home, in the garden or at a friend’s house rather than true cordless cinema. For buyers in the UK, that means you’ll want to think about extension leads, outdoor power access and placement rather than battery runtime. Since neither model offers a clear battery advantage, there’s no winner here.

Price and value for money

Product A wins decisively. At £189.99, it is £70 cheaper than Product B, yet it also claims the higher brightness rating at 1200 ANSI versus 700 ANSI. That makes the WiMiUS the better value by a wide margin, because you’re paying less for what should be the more impactful spec in everyday use. Product B is not badly priced in absolute terms for a smart projector, but it has to justify a higher cost despite lower light output. Unless you specifically want the VOPLLS software experience, Product A is the better buy on value.

Game library/features

This is a streaming-feature comparison rather than a gaming one, and Product B has a slight edge in app ecosystem wording. Its “officially-licensed app” positioning may appeal to users who want a cleaner, more straightforward smart interface for Netflix-style viewing and casual streaming from iOS or Android. Product A counters with “Netflix Included,” Dolby Audio, HDR10, short throw, auto focus, keystone and 50% zoom, which is a very strong feature list for the money. For most buyers, Product A’s broader feature set is more useful; Product B’s app licensing is nice, but not enough to offset the weaker spec sheet.

Overall user experience

Product A is the easier recommendation for most people. It combines the brighter 1200 ANSI image, HDR10, short throw flexibility, auto focus, keystone correction and a much lower price, which should make it more satisfying from first setup to final credits. Product B may offer a slightly more polished smart-app experience, and its 4.3/5 rating is still respectable, but the combination of lower brightness and higher price makes it harder to recommend as the better all-rounder. If you want the projector that is most likely to deliver a bigger, brighter and more cinematic result in typical UK home use, Product A is the winner.

Overall summary: WiMiUS Product A is the better projector for almost everyone. It is brighter, cheaper and more feature-rich where it matters most, making it the stronger choice for bedrooms, outdoor movie nights and general home cinema. VOPLLS Product B only makes sense if you specifically prefer its officially licensed app ecosystem and are happy to pay more for less brightness.

Buy the 【Netflix Included/Dolby Audio】Smart if...

Buy Product A if you want the brightest image for the least money, especially for bedroom walls, outdoor film nights or larger screen sizes. It’s also the better choice if you care about HDR10, short throw flexibility and getting the strongest all-round spec without paying extra. If value for money is your top priority, A is the one to choose.

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

Buy Product B if you specifically want the VOPLLS brand experience and place extra trust in its officially licensed app setup. It may suit you if you prioritise a slightly more premium-feeling smart interface over raw brightness. Choose it only if you’re happy to pay £70 more for lower ANSI output and you know the app ecosystem is the deciding factor for you.

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