Xgimi wants to make the living room into a daylight-ready cinema and a competitive gaming rig all at once. At IFA 2025, the company unveiled the HORIZON 20 series — three 4K Google TV projectors (Horizon 20, 20 Pro, and the flagship 20 Max) — that lean hard into brightness, low-latency gaming modes, and a stack of image/codec bells and whistles that will matter to both console and PC players. If you’ve ever tried to game on a projector during the day, Xgimi is pitching the Horizon 20 as the first time that the tech actually keeps up with the idea.
Projectors have always sold the dream of an enormous screen, but the practical problem is ambient light: most home projectors simply don’t have enough punch to make a daytime image look convincing. Xgimi’s answer is engineering — an RGB triple-laser engine plus something they call the “X-Master Red Ring Lens” — and, for the 20 Max, a headline figure of 5,700 ISO lumens. That’s not a small bump: Xgimi says the Pro and base models sit at around 4,200 and 3,100 ISO lumens, respectively. Those numbers place the Max in territory typically associated with very expensive, professional-grade systems, and Xgimi says it expects reviewers and buyers to see that brightness in real rooms, not just on spec sheets.
A quick note on measurements: the industry has historically used different standards (ANSI, CVIA, ISO) and that’s a source of confusion — some Chinese manufacturers used to publish optimistic numbers that didn’t match third-party tests. ISO lumens are a legitimate, stricter metric than some older vendor claims, and often produce slightly smaller numbers than loose internal tests. Even so, 5,700 ISO lumens is a very high number for a home-style, all-in-one projector. Treat it as impressive on paper, and worth verification in controlled reviews and real rooms.
What will make gamers sit up is Xgimi’s latency claims. The company is advertising a 1ms input response — but with an important caveat: that figure applies at 1080p/240Hz. If you drop to 1080p/120Hz, Xgimi lists about 2.2ms, and at 4K/60Hz, it reports roughly 3ms. In practical terms, that means the Horizon 20s are targeting fast-paced, high-frame-rate play (think competitive shooters and fighting games) at 1080p and consoles/PCs that support very high refresh rates — while still offering very reasonable lag at 4K movie/casual gaming settings. The panels also support 240Hz refresh and VRR, so they line up with modern GPU and console features.
Remember: measured input lag in a lab can differ from perceived responsiveness, and your own setup (cables, console/PC settings, image processing modes) will influence the real experience. But compared to older projectors that used to sit in double-digit millisecond territory, these are notable figures.
Beyond raw brightness, Xgimi has packed the Horizon 20 family with HDR formats and image tools: Dolby Vision, HDR10+ and IMAX Enhanced are listed, and the projectors include optical zoom plus lens-shift mechanics that let you physically move the lens without digital scaling — useful if you want a large, properly framed image without angling the projector awkwardly. Xgimi also points to dynamic black enhancement modes that increase contrast (the company quotes up to a 10,000:1 dynamic ratio with enhancement on). Built-in Netflix support and a 24W Harman-Kardon speaker setup round out the out-of-box experience..
Xgimi plans to open preorders in the US and UK on September 5, 2025, with shipments expected in October. U.S. MSRP is listed at $1,699 (Horizon 20), $2,499 (Horizon 20 Pro), and $2,999 (Horizon 20 Max). Early-bird launch pricing temporarily drops those amounts to $1,189 / $1,749 / $2,399 and includes a floor stand and an Assassin’s Creed game code as a bundle incentive. That puts the Max roughly in the same aspirational price band as other premium all-in-one 4K laser projectors, but with unusually high brightness claims.
The headline 5,700 ISO lumens invites comparison. Dangbei — another Chinese maker that’s been aggressively pushing laser brightness — has recently claimed around 6,200 ISO lumens for its S7 Ultra Max, which also markets itself as a daylight-capable 4K laser projector. Those higher lumen claims are part of a broader trend: vendors are competing on “how bright” while also trying to keep noise, cooling, and cost reasonable. The upshot is obvious: real-world testing will be key. Paper lumens are one thing; consistent color, contrast, and thermal management while running bright are another.
If you’re considering one of these for a daytime living room or mixed-use space, look for independent testing that covers:
- Measured ISO/ANSI lumens under standardized conditions.
- Color accuracy at different brightness levels (high brightness isn’t useful if colors bleach out).
- Heat and fan noise under prolonged bright output.
- Real-world input lag tests across the three modes Xgimi advertises (1080p/240Hz, 1080p/120Hz, 4K/60Hz).
- Built-in streaming compatibility and whether apps like Netflix truly work reliably across regions.
Those elements will tell you whether the Horizon 20 is simply a bold spec sheet, or a true step-change for daytime projector use.
If you host lots of daylight viewing, have a room you don’t want to black out, or want a giant competitive gaming display without moving to a dedicated dark theater, the Horizon 20 line is aimed squarely at you. For cinephiles who prioritize perfect black levels and absolute color fidelity in a dark room, a more conventional high-end projector or OLED TV might still be preferable. For gamers who want scale and responsiveness at the same time, Xgimi is dialing into an increasingly important niche: big image, bright room, low-lag play.
Xgimi’s HORIZON 20 series is an audacious attempt to push projectors into a daylight-friendly, game-friendly space that used to be the exclusive domain of very expensive, pro-grade kit. The specs are eye-catching — but they demand verification. If the lab and long-term user tests back up Xgimi’s claims, we could be witnessing a meaningful shift in what “home theater” looks like when the sun is up.
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