Benq x1300i

3 min read

Great for gamers, solid for movie fans

Two speakers are driven by 10W of amplification using digital processing

Projector | £1199 | whf.cm/BenQ_X1300i

From its fancy cubic design to its built-in Trevolo sound system and surprisingly well-developed focus on video gaming, the X1300i does everything it can to stand out from today’s crowded projector shelves.

For the X1300i’s asking price you would expect to get a 4K projector, but while the X1300i is capable of taking in 4K signals, natively it is only a Full HD projector, and many Full HD projectors can be had for much less. BenQ has a few potent excuses for the X1300i’s price, though. Namely its serious built-in audio system, strong support for HDR, impressively bright lighting engine, built-in Android smart system, and unique gaming features.

A stylish mix of white and glassy black, with orange front-edge trim, pretty much screams ‘fun’ at you. The lens sits in a recessed area in the top left quadrant of the large front face, with essentially the whole bottom half of the projector given over to the built-in stereo audio system. Basic zoom and focus rings are accessed through a window at the projector’s side.

Justifying its price

The X1300i is built around a single-chip, Full HD DLP optical system that claims 3000 lumens of peak light output and coverage of up to 98 per cent of the Rec 709 colour system. Alongside that high brightness is a colossal claimed contrast ratio of 500,000:1. The X1300i can also play HDR video in the HDR10 format, and uses LED lighting to deliver a whopping claimed lamp life of up to 30,000 hours.

The built-in sound system is designed by Italian hi-fi brand Trevolo. It comprises two speakers driven by 10W of amplification, and has added processing in the form of Bongiovi DPS. Rather than living on a prayer, though, this audio processor is designed to ‘add depth, clarity, bass definition, presence and enhance stereo field imaging’, with a special focus on gaming applications.

Gaming support is extensive, with two HDMIs that handle 4K HDR gaming feeds up to 60Hz or 1080p feeds to 120Hz. BenQ claims a 120Hz lag of only just over 8ms – a good result by projector standards. As you would hope of a projector aimed at fairly casual use, the X1300i is easy to set up. Simple screw-down legs help angle the image onto a screen or wall, and the zoom adjustment offers 1.2x optical zoom. There is no optical image shifting, so you will likely depend on keystone correction to get the edges of your image parallel.

Depth and realism

Remarkable brightness helps game graphics look immersive, engaging and vibran

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