

🎥 Elevate your movie nights—big screen brilliance, zero hassle!
The BenQ GP100A is a portable 1080p projector delivering true 1000 ANSI lumens brightness and vibrant visuals up to 150 inches. Preloaded with Android TV and Netflix, plus support for Chromecast and AirPlay, it offers seamless streaming and casting. Auto-focus and auto keystone ensure quick setup, while a built-in 20W 2.1 channel speaker provides rich audio. With versatile HDMI, USB-A, and USB-C ports, it’s designed for effortless portability and connectivity, perfect for outdoor cinema, gaming, and professional presentations.















| ASIN | B0C8XLPDHG |
| Additional Features | Auto Focus, Built-In Handle, Built-In Speaker, Digital Keystone Correction, Portable |
| Antenna Location | Gaming, Home Cinema |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,185 in Video Projectors |
| Brand | BenQ |
| Brightness | 1000 Lumen |
| Built-In Media | Adaptor, Power Cord, Remote, User Manual, Warranty Card |
| Color | White |
| Compatible Devices | Gaming Console, Laptop, Smartphone, Speaker, Tablet |
| Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, HDMI , USB, Wi-Fi |
| Contrast Ratio | 100000:1 |
| Control Method | Remote |
| Controller Type | Remote Control |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 19 Reviews |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 1920 x 1080 Pixels |
| Display Type | LED |
| Display resolution | 1920 x 1080 |
| Form Factor | Portable |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00840046049782 |
| Hardware Connectivity | HDMI, Micro USB 2.0 Type A, USB Type C |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 8.41"L x 6.65"W x 7.6"H |
| Item Height | 7.6 inches |
| Item Weight | 4.44 Kilograms |
| Light Source Operating Life | 20000 Hours |
| Manufacturer | BenQ |
| Maximum Image Size | 150 Inches |
| Maximum Throw Distance | 10 Feet |
| Minimum Image Size | 60 Inches |
| Minimum Throw Distance | 5 Feet |
| Model Name | GP100A |
| Model Number | GP100A |
| Mounting Type | Tabletop Mount |
| Native Resolution | 1920 x 1080 |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Gaming, Home Cinema |
| Special Feature | Auto Focus, Built-In Handle, Built-In Speaker, Digital Keystone Correction, Portable |
| UPC | 840046049782 |
| Vertical Keystone Correction | 2.5 Picometer |
| Video Encoding | AVI |
| Warranty Description | 3 Year Manufactuer |
| Wattage | 120 watts |
D**G
Great automatic and smart projector
Truth in advertising matters! Have you ever purchased a projector advertised as having 1000 lumens but found the actual image quality to be disappointing? I did! Boy, was I upset! So I returned it. I've previously bought projectors that claimed to have astronomical-quality lumens or contrast ratios, but they turned out to be very disappointing in actual use. But then I bought the BenQ GP100A and the brightness performance matched its specifications. It delivered an outstanding picture as advertised! Another issue I had was my original USB type C cable doesn’t support video output and I bought one from Amazon the other day. But I found out that by using a USB type C cable, the GP100A connects directly to the Nintendo Switch for video game display output. This makes it unnecessary to put the Nintendo Switch on its docking. I really like this projector. Other cool things I really liked about it are 1. A genuine 1000 ANSI lumens without exaggeration. 2. Built-in Android TV & NETFLIX system. 3. The 20W subwoofer provides ample sound volume. 4. Instant automatic correction and focusing (an absolute lifesaver for the lazy) ready to use right away, saves time and effort. 5. Can also be used as a power bank to charge through USB C This is a great projector combines good ANSI, smart features, and portability. Highly recommended!
M**M
Great little projector
This is a great projector so far. It's bright and has a nice crisp picture and full colors. I was looking for 2000+ ANSI lumens but this is plenty. We use this for outdoor movie night and indoor low light viewing. The auto adjustments are great. The eye protection is nice for kids walking in front of the projector. The sound is not mind-blowing but it's perfect for a 20ftx20ft space. The setup is stress free - it's super easy to get Prime, Netflix set up. Think of this as a Smart Projector. Make sure you get the right cable if you want to hook up a Nintendo Switch (Amazon Basics USB-C to USB-C 3.1 Gen 2 Fast Charging Cable, 60W, 10Gbps High-Speed, 3 Foot worked for me). Downsides: no carry case sold for this projector, it's not weather resistant / drop-proof, and it has no internal battery to make it truly portable.
J**I
Great Portable projector that checks a lot of boxes
Tripod mountable? Check. Ceiling Mountable? Full HD? Check. Smart google tv? Check. Bright enough for dim room viewing? Check. Loud enough for inside movie night? Check. Better sound than my tv? Check. Plex? Check. Battery option? Check. Dust-free optics? Check. Great keystone flexibility? Check. Crisp and quick autofocus? Check. I’ve had it for about 3-4 weeks so far and love it. I can watch a full movie using a 30k mah 65+w usb-c powerbank which will be amazing for summer movie night setups. Colors are great. Game mode is nice. Supports up to a 4k signal, so I do t have to mess with my Xbox settings. Supposedly supports switch via usbc, but an expensive hyper-specific cord seems to be required (I dont care enough for that lol). The cons: -the power cord is a little awkward due to the laptop-esque brick in the middle- wish this were a standard three prong cord instead of a barrel plug. - a tad bit heavy, due to (I’m guessing) the extra speaker power. - audio out options are a little limited, particularly when viewing something using the HDMI in, since ARC audio and Bluetooth out are only able to be used when viewing the built in Google TV ( likely most of the time). This leaves built in speakers and 3.5mm out (aux) as the only remaining options for hdmi sourced video/games, which some may find lacking.
S**D
Good picture but lacking features
Pros: - Great bright picture - Excellent speakers - Very solidly built and feels like it will last Cons: - No matter what cable I used even when following the exact requirements from BenQ I could not get my switch to connect with once cable - Quite big and heavy. I’d barely call this portable. It would be much better for just moving from room to room or traveling in your car. Good luck flying with this thing - Software is lacking. It’s android tv with the extra benefit of licensed Netflix, but google tv is superior in every way. Their other new projectors have this - At this price point, a laser projector would be much better The cons were enough for me to return this unit, but if my use case were different I probably would’ve kept it.
C**T
Seriously great and bright for its price
I upgraded to this after owning the benq GV30. It’s seriously great. It’s very bright and has modern connections, including a USB-C port that you can plug a Nintendo Switch into without needing a dock. You can also power the projector with an external USB-C battery which turns it into a completely portable projector. It has a good Android TV dongle which can play all the apps, including Netflix. I wish there was a case available for it, because I’d like to travel with it.
R**N
Good DLP for those sensitive to rainbows, but if you’re not, there are better options
Meets expectations. The Hook Up’s review measured only a ~300:1 contrast ratio, which is pretty apparent. Projected on a wall, which is likely the purpose of this portable projector , colors don’t “pop” like they do on projectors with higher ratios, though they do look natural if a bit unsaturated. However, this is vastly improved when using even a simple screen, at which point the images matches probably an average IPS LCD panel. Black levels are more grey and shadow detail can be lost (like an IPS panel), but it’s not completely crushed, I would say about 1/3 of the details are lost depending on how dark the scene is and how willing you are to increase brightness to compensate. That being said, I knew all these things going in and still purchased because my use case is rather unique. I needed: - a small projector due to limited apartment space - decent brightness for ambient light situations on a 100” screen (>800 lumens) - Tripod mount, standard throw since I need to abut it against the wall as close as possible due to space constraints - A lens physically offset to the left in order to get the image centered on the opposite wall because a bed obstructing dead-on center placement - 100% vertical offset since I can only mount the projector ~4.5 feet off the ground due to a ceiling fan preventing ceiling mounting and a window preventing wall mounting. - Long-lasting light source (ie no bulb lamps) - Low input lag for gaming - < 1k because I’m broke lol. This really only leaves DLP options, and unfortunately I’m also very sensitive to rainbow effect (RBE), so finding a comfortable DLP projector with minimal RBE was also a challenge. The only real contenders are this, the GV50, Xgimi Halo+, and the JMGO N1s. I really wanted to like the GV50 and N1s based on The Hook Up’s review. But, while the JMGO options have notably better software, polish, and picture quality all around without question, on my testing they were riddled with rainbow effect (RBE) and did strain my eyes a bit. Xgimi options also have lots of RBE. The GV50 had less RBE was not bright enough and had very prominent screen door effect. The GP100a, however, despite the “flattest” picture, had great brightness, negligible screen door, and fit all my aforementioned spec requirements. Also despite this being a DLP, I barely noticed RBE—I actually forget it’s there need to try to look for it to see it in the GP100a (vs other protectors where I have to actively try to ignore it). I can’t even see it with white text on a black background, which is usually the worst culprit. And it was the cheapest of the 3. Bonus it has good speakers. I don’t use a Switch so I can’t comment on that functionality, but the PS5 seems to work great. TLDR pros: - Screen viewable at normal brightness in moderately lit room. With a dark room, you can step the brightness down to Eco mode or further to Low Power Consumption mode to reduce eye strain, improve black levels, and the projector fan/whine becomes dead silent - Good speakers - Relatively lightweight (~6-7 lbs) - Backlit remote - BenQ 3-year warranty - Accurate-appearing colors out of the box - Eye protection feature (dims light when it senses someone walking in front) - Minimal RBE if any. - Minimal screen door effect - Autofocus is solid - Buttons on the projector so if u don’t have the remote you’re not completely f***ed. - Great input lag (~25ms) for gaming Cons: - Mediocre contrast (far from “inky blacks” mentioned on some YouTube reviews) - Colors, while accurate, are not the trendy “punchy” and “vibrant” colors seen with LCD or Laser tech if projected on a wall (screen is better, as usual) - Not a lot of menu picture options (no indication RGB levels, only 3 picture presets) - There’s 2 settings menus: one for projector settings (eg picture, sound, brightness) and one for system settings (Bluetooth, WiFi). Can be confusing. Projector settings are accessible with any input source, but if you accidentally hit system settings, it’ll switch input to ATV automatically. - Menus feel unpolished (shipped with firmware that had misspellings throughout the interface, though patched with firmware update) - Bulkier compared to other portable options - Cannot do over-the-air firmware updates, need to use the hidden USB port (ie not the easily accessible side port) which may be too deep for some flash drives to reach. - Bluetooth headphones only work when using ATV (ie the streaming smart TV functionality). You cannot, for instance, have HDMI audio routed to Bluetooth headphones - Handle is awkwardly placed so installing the streaming stick is difficult - DLP chip shifting whine is somewhat audible in normal brightness mode (but after 2 minutes your brain filters it out like fan noise) - ~1.5-2” overscan on a 100” image (not a big deal) - the down button on the remote triggers my room’s air filter to ping (not BenQ’s fault, probably just a coincidence) - “Speaker mode” is a farce. Yes technically you can use it as a network speaker but NOT as a Bluetooth speaker. Plus you’d have to turn on the projector screen and select speaker mode. Would be better if there was a switch or button on the projector itself to trigger a Bluetooth speaker mode. Despite these cons, I can look past a lot of them since many are “set and forget” or not features I use. For my use case, this projector fits the bill. If the colors and contrast were improved (like if they came out with a laser version or updated the tone mapping) then this would be a no brainer. That being said, if you can’t see RBE, the JMGO options outperform this on every metric.
L**S
Good picture, terrible audio problems
Its a good projector but the speakers blew after on 15 hrs of use, so it requires a separate speaker now. And now for some reason every 3-5 hours or so the speaker plays about 15 seconds of static. Which isnt the end of the world but wen ur in the middle of a movie and get lose audio for 15 seconds it gets a bit annoying. The problem could be in the auxiliary port, which im forced to use because the Bluetooth connection wasnt usable either, it caused the video to stutter and audio to cut out alot, which was way more annoying than the auxiliary static.
K**T
Underrated
I really like it so far. - It's compact, can be powered via a power bank (in the eco mode it consumes about 30-40Wh). - You need an update an app to do AirPlay video streaming (like on any other projector), but it is reliable unlike on the other projector I've tried - The USB-C connectivity is amazing. Worked with my iPhone and iPad (make sure you have a proper cable). - Can turn off the light source and work like a wireless speaker - Image quality is really good
Trustpilot
5 days ago
4 days ago