JMGO’s N3 Ultimate projector is the new portable 4K champ | The Verge
Overview
Tech Expand Amazon Apple Facebook Google Microsoft Samsung Business See all tech
Reviews Expand Smart Home Reviews Phone Reviews Tablet Reviews Headphone Reviews See all reviews
Details
Science Expand Space Energy Environment Health See all science
Entertainment Expand TV Shows Movies Audio See all entertainment
Policy Expand Antitrust Politics Law Security See all policy
Gadgets Expand Laptops Phones TVs Headphones Speakers Wearables See all gadgets
Verge Shopping Expand Buying Guides Deals Gift Guides See all shopping
Streaming Expand Disney HBONetflix You Tube Creators See all streaming
Transportation Expand Electric Cars Autonomous Cars Ride-sharing Scooters See all transportation
Reviews Close Reviews Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All Reviews
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Gadgets Close Gadgets Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All Gadgets
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Tech Close Tech Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All Tech
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
JMGO’s N3 Ultimate projector is the new portable 4K champ
An incredibly bright Google TV all-in-one that’s also part robot.
If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Sorry Anker: JMGO now makes my favorite flagship portable projector.
The N3 Ultimate is an excellent portable 4K projector that defeats moderate ambient light at severe placement angles and can rival more expensive home theater installations at night. After a few weeks of testing, I think the raw adaptability exhibited by the JMGO’s N3 Ultimate justifies its current
Modern all-in-one projectors built around Google TV are already super accommodating when it comes to placement. Set one down on a living room table or campsite rock and it will begin searching for a screen or blank wall while avoiding obstacles to project a focused, color-corrected image that’s properly aligned. But these techniques typically resort to digital optimizations that degrade image brightness, resolution, and responsiveness. To avoid this, it’s always best to place a projector directly in front of the projection surface.
Optimizing image placement is fast, effective, and fun.
JMGO’s N3 Ultimate projector promises “lossless placement” by mounting it on a motorized gimbal that rotates horizontally and vertically. That, combined with optical zoom and generous lens shift, increases off-center placement flexibility without resorting to digital trickery. You can even drag the image Wiimote-style to the exact spot you want it using the included remote control. Handy!
The N3 Ultimate doesn’t live up to all of its marketing hype, however. It’s pitched as a 5800 ISO lumen projector that I found to be unwatchable in its brightest mode for reasons I will explain later. In modes you can actually use, you’re getting about 4,600 ISO lumens, which drops to 3,000 ISO lumens if you want more accurate colors — that’s noticeably brighter than Anker’s Nebula X1 flagship 4K portable running in comparable modes.
Even though the N3 Ultimate misses the advertised ceiling, its class-leading brightness and impressive picture could make this a television replacement for some.
Unbeatable physical placement options that preserve image quality Incredibly bright, daylight-ready output Excellent out-of-the-box color reproduction Very good sound for a portable Snappy menu navigation and native Netflix support
Unbeatable physical placement options that preserve image quality
Horribly green and loud at max brightness Automatic eye protection is wonky and slow to react Clumsy menus required to swap into Bluetooth speaker mode It’s portable, so where’s the handle?
Automatic eye protection is wonky and slow to react
Clumsy menus required to swap into Bluetooth speaker mode
The first spec I look at on portable projectors is the lumen rating. If the number is listed as anything other than ANSI or ISO, I just assume they are lying. JMGO isn’t exactly lying with its 5800 ISO lumen spec, but it’s not being completely transparent, either.
The N3 Ultimate only comes close to hitting that incredibly bright mark (I measured closer to 5,200 ISO lumens) when running in Dynamic mode, which skews the colors horribly green and causes the cooling fans to roar. The colors produced by this triple-laser RGB DLP projector are most accurate in Movie mode, but at almost half the advertised brightness.
Out of the box, I found the colors and tones produced by the N3 Ultimate’s factory tuning to be more true to life than many projectors in this class. Typically, I’d select Vivid during the day and then switch to Movie mode in darkened rooms. Sometimes I’d forget because the differences weren’t always obvious. The projector’s brightness allows its Dolby Vision support to meaningfully improve picture quality in both dark and not-so-dark rooms.
I tested the N3 Ultimate for an unhealthy number of hours on displays as large as 110 inches and as small as 32 inches; on painted walls, a glossy tabletop, a matte-white screen that increased the intensity, and a gray Ambient Light Rejecting (ALR) screen that boosted the contrast. It adapted admirably to each scenario with little intervention.
Typically the projector ran whisper quiet — I had to strain to hear it. In warmer rooms and with adaptive brightness turned on, I could hear the fans kick up a notch to about 30d B from their usual 26d B, at a distance of one meter. At max brightness, the fans peaked at a very distracting 50d B.
Daytime watchable on this folded Ikea table when all those lumens are compressed into a 32-inch image.
Hank doesn’t like the new Ferrari, but he likes the 110-inch projected image on this ALR screen at midday.
This 100-inch image is watchable, but washed out when viewing it outside at dusk.
Optimizing image placement is a little tricky at first due to all the menu options and descriptions that aren’t exactly consumer friendly. Fortunately, there’s an optimization button right on the remote that removes the guesswork. Hold it down and you can drag the projected image around the room to center it wherever you want. Double-click the button and you’re presented with four menus that guide you through image-tuning options for Lossless Lens Shift, Gimbal Motion, Zoom, and Rotate. It’s very well done and makes the projector fast and easy to set up at new locations.
JMGO’s four optimization menus make fine-tuning image placement quick and easy.
The sound is decent for a portable all-in-one of this size. It’s essentially an Anker Nebula X1 turned on its side, but lacking the optional satellite speakers that make Anker’s portable projector unbeatable for sound. Without those satellites, however, the Anker and JMGO sound roughly the same. The N3 Ultimate produced clear, detailed, room-filling sound with a respectable amount of bass. So, it’s a shame that JMGO doesn’t make it easy to quickly switch the projector into Bluetooth speaker mode from the shutdown screen like many portables — instead, you have to clumsily enable it through the settings menu.
The N3 Ultimate runs Netflix out of the box and menu navigation is snappy — two things you can’t take for granted with portable Google TV projectors. The one thing missing is an integrated handle, which makes this a two-handed portable. Fortunately, JMGO does ship the N3 Ultimate inside a reusable carrying case that came in handy when transporting it by car.
Dolby Vision HDR helps make scenes pop from Life in Color, with David Attenborough.
I also found the projector’s automatic eye protection feature to be wonky. Even at the default sensitivity, it can be triggered for no reason. Worse, it’s slow to respond when eyeballs are actually at risk from the laser optics. And besides an on / off button, the N3 Ultimate lacks on-device controls — don’t lose the remote!
“Ultimate” is a dangerously high bar to set when naming your projector, but JMGO gets close to the mark. If audio quality is your absolute highest priority, Anker’s bulkier Nebula X1 speaker bundle remains a tempting alternative — though it will cost you significantly more cash. But if you are looking for class-leading brightness and unmatched physical placement flexibility from a 4K all-in-one projector, the JMGO N3 Ultimate at $2,399 is the way to go.
Light Source: MALC 5.0 Pure Triple Laser / RGB Laser
3-in-1 Projection: Combines Optical Zoom, Lens Shift, and an AI Gimbal base
Projection Types: Front, Rear, Front Ceiling, Rear Ceiling
Operating System: Google TV with native Netflix integration
Smart Features: Auto Screen Fitting, Auto Keystone, Auto Focus, Adaptive Brightness, and Wall Color Adaptation, Eye Protection
Custom Memory: AI Spatial Memory System to remember preferred walls, zoom levels, and shortcuts
Speakers: Dual 12.5W stereo speakers (25W total output)
Extra Features: Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) support and specialized game modes
Wired Ports: 2x HDMI 2.1 (with one port supporting e ARC) and 1x USB 3.0
Thomas Ricker Close Thomas Ricker Deputy Editor Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All by Thomas Ricker
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Accessory Reviews Close Accessory Reviews Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All Accessory Reviews
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Gadgets Close Gadgets Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All Gadgets
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Reviews Close Reviews Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All Reviews
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Tech Close Tech Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All Tech
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
TVs Close TVs Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All TVs
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Work anywhere Close Work anywhere Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Follow Follow See All Work anywhere
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
Grand Theft Auto VI is warping the video game release calendar
The mayor of Shelbyville, Indiana, says only people who live in ‘shitty houses’ oppose data center
Summer Game Fest Live 2026: The biggest news, trailers, and announcements
Key Takeaways
- Tech Expand Amazon Apple Facebook Google Microsoft Samsung Business See all tech
- Reviews Expand Smart Home Reviews Phone Reviews Tablet Reviews Headphone Reviews See all reviews
- Science Expand Space Energy Environment Health See all science
- Entertainment Expand TV Shows Movies Audio See all entertainment
- Policy Expand Antitrust Politics Law Security See all policy



