The best thing about a portable projector is also its biggest annoyance: you can take it anywhere, but getting a good picture often means spending a few minutes arranging the room around it.
Samsung’s new The Freestyle+ is designed to remove much of that friction. Announced in the U.S. on July 17, the compact projector builds on the original Freestyle’s flexible, swiveling design with brighter output, smarter image correction, and a more complete smart-TV experience. It is available from Samsung.com and select retailers for $1,199.99.

The pitch is simple: point it at a wall, adjust the angle, and start watching. The reality of projectors has rarely been quite that effortless. Walls are not always flat or white. Furniture gets in the way. The image can land slightly off-center, or stretch into an awkward trapezoid. Even focus can become a small chore when the projector moves from a bedroom shelf to a backyard table.
The Freestyle+ uses a group of AI-assisted features to deal with those everyday problems. Its 3D Auto Keystone and Wall Calibration systems can correct the image on uneven surfaces and compensate for the color and brightness of patterned or painted walls. Screen Fit adjusts the picture to the available space, while Obstacle Avoidance can detect objects in the projection path and shift the image around them.
That is a more practical use of AI than the phrase might initially suggest. Samsung is not presenting The Freestyle+ as a projector that creates content or radically changes what people watch. Instead, the intelligence sits quietly in the background, helping the device adapt to the room. The goal is to make projection feel less like setting up home theater equipment and more like placing a lamp.
The projector can also focus itself using an ultrasonic motor that detects the distance to the viewing surface. That matters for a device designed to move frequently. A traditional projector can be perfectly sharp in one position and noticeably soft after being nudged a few inches. Samsung’s approach is meant to make those adjustments happen automatically.
The Freestyle+ can produce an image of up to 100 inches in Full HD resolution. Samsung rates its brightness at up to 430 ISO lumens, alongside PurColor and HDR10+ support. That is a meaningful improvement for a compact projector, particularly when watching in a room with some ambient light. Independent coverage of the model’s earlier unveiling described the brightness as nearly double that of the previous-generation Freestyle, whose relatively dim output was one of its main limitations.
Still, the usual projector reality applies. A brighter portable projector is more flexible, but it does not turn a wall into a television in direct sunlight. The strongest results will likely come in the evening, in a bedroom, or in a living room where the lights are low. The Freestyle+ is about convenience and atmosphere as much as outright picture performance.
That balance has always been central to the Freestyle line. Samsung introduced the original model in 2022 as a lightweight projector, speaker, and ambient-lighting device in one. Its cradle allowed the unit to rotate toward a wall, floor, or ceiling, while automatic focus and keystone correction helped it create a usable image without a dedicated screen.
The Freestyle+ keeps that character but expands the entertainment side. It includes Samsung’s Smart Hub, access to streaming apps, Samsung TV Plus with more than 750 subscription-free channels, and Gaming Hub for cloud-based gaming without a console. Users can also mirror compatible Galaxy and Apple devices through Smart View, Tap View, and AirPlay 2.
The built-in speaker is designed to project sound in 360 degrees, with dual passive woofers intended to add more weight than the projector’s small size might suggest. Samsung’s Q-Symphony feature can synchronize the projector with compatible Samsung soundbars and Wi-Fi speakers, although those products are sold separately.
There is also a more visible AI layer in the form of Samsung’s Vision AI Companion. The company says users can interact through Bixby and Gemini to ask questions, receive recommendations, and navigate content from a central dashboard. As with other connected Samsung devices, the smart features require an account and an internet connection, and some AI interactions may involve third-party services.
Power is another part of the portable equation. The Freestyle+ can work with Samsung’s optional Freestyle Battery Base or compatible USB-C battery packs, allowing it to operate away from a wall outlet. That makes outdoor movie nights and temporary setups more plausible, though the battery remains an extra purchase rather than part of the projector itself.
The Freestyle+ is not trying to replace a bright television or a dedicated home-cinema projector. Its appeal is different. It is for the person who wants a large screen without permanently giving up wall space, the family that wants to move movie night outdoors, or anyone who likes the idea of a ceiling-sized screen but dislikes the setup that usually comes with it.
Samsung’s most important upgrade may be that the projector is becoming less demanding. Better brightness helps, but automatic correction and obstacle detection address the small inconveniences that can stop people from using a portable projector in the first place. If those features work as promised, The Freestyle+ could make the biggest screen in the house the one that is not permanently installed anywhere.
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