Eventually the projector sorted itself out, but it took a lot of shifting around to force it to try autofocusing again and again. This wouldn’t have been an issue if I could have adjusted the focus manually with buttons on the projector or remote control, but there are none. The Vivid and Sports picture modes can feel a little oversaturated, though that has a nice effect in some highly stylized content - think “Cyberpunk: Edgerunners.” The standard picture mode offers a decent balance of strong color with realistic skin tones, and there’s always Filmmaker mode to keep the picture closer to what the creator intended, even if it comes at the cost of color vibrance.įrom the jump, I ran into an issue: the picture was completely out of focus and struggling to sort itself out. Even the bleak environments of southern Texas in “News of the World” have plenty of energy with the large, blue sky filling much of the screen. Cartoon content appears vibrant, keeping the lively feel of a show like “Bob’s Burgers” perfectly intact. LG pairs that with solid color presentation. Whether casting a smaller or larger picture, the 4K resolution holds up quite well, keeping the fine details crisp and avoiding the sort of pixelation I saw crop up on the Anker Nebula Capsule 3 Laser - though that one was an outlier among 1080p projectors. It’s plenty bright for casting a large picture in the 60-inch ballpark, though it can get a little washed out in dark scenes if you stretch it beyond that and don’t have the lights out and black-out curtains. The LG CineBeam PU700R gets at least one crucial thing right: its picture looks great in a dim room.
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