Review Projectors TOPTRO

TOPTRO TP2 Projector - Review and opinions

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76 /100 Overall

Score

Image and room fit 69/100
Setup and portability 76/100
Inputs and streaming 77/100
Sound and noise 72/100
Customer reviews 82/100

Is it worth it?

If you want a tiny projector that can live in a bedroom, move to a patio, or travel between rooms without a lot of setup fuss, the TOPTRO TP2 lands in a useful middle ground. Its built-in Android 14 platform, Wi‑Fi 6, and two-way Bluetooth 5.4 make it more self-contained than a basic HDMI-only mini projector, but the trade-off is that this is still a native 720P unit with a dim-room bias, not a shortcut to true cinema brightness.

I would put this in the buy pile for casual movie nights, streaming in small spaces, and quick setups where convenience matters more than image ambition. Skip it if you want a projector for bright daytime viewing or if you expect native 1080P sharpness from the panel itself, because the practical appeal here is portability and built-in streaming, not a premium theater image.

Resolution 1280 x 720
Inputs HDMI and USB
Audio Two-way Bluetooth audio
Wireless Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4
Weight 0.4 kg
Projection ratio 0.82:1

Smart streaming without extra boxes

The built-in Android 14 platform and preloaded app access make this projector feel ready to use as soon as it connects to Wi‑Fi.

In practice, that removes a common annoyance in the mini-projector category, where a separate stick or laptop often becomes mandatory. The trade-off is that the experience is most attractive for casual streaming, not for buyers who want a full-blown app ecosystem with lots of local storage room.

Small-room placement made easier

The 0.82:1 throw ratio, 270° rotation, auto vertical keystone, and manual focus combine into a setup path that favors bedrooms, desks, and tight living spaces.

That matters because the image can be framed without rearranging the room around the projector. The limitation is the same one that comes with most compact projectors: the closer and more flexible the placement, the more you need to accept dim-room viewing as the natural use case.

Wireless and audio flexibility

Wi‑Fi 6 and two-way Bluetooth 5.4 give this model a more modern connection story than many budget minis, and the HDMI plus USB ports keep wired sources in play.

That mix is useful if you want to switch between phone casting, a streaming app, and a laptop without extra adapters. The practical caveat is that this is still a convenience-first setup, so external speakers remain the better choice when you care about fuller sound for longer movie sessions.

Use evaluation

On a nightstand or a small desk, the TP2 makes the first setup decision easy because the 270° rotating stand and auto vertical keystone do most of the positioning work for you. That matters in a bedroom or dorm where the projector may sit close to the wall, and the short-throw 0.82:1 design means you do not need a deep room to get a large picture. The upside is obvious convenience; the trade-off is that this is built for controlled light and close placement, not for fighting a sunlit room.

For streaming, the built-in Android 14 system changes the experience more than the spec sheet headline suggests. You are not forced to hang everything off a dongle or laptop, and the 1GB RAM plus 8GB storage setup is enough for the kind of app-first use this model is aimed at. The practical win is fewer cables and fewer steps before playback starts. The practical limit is storage headroom and platform simplicity, so this fits best when you want a compact entertainment box rather than a do-everything media hub.

The image route is honest for the price lane: native 720P with 1080P and 4K playback support, plus the usual dim-room recommendation, puts it in the casual-viewing class rather than the serious home-cinema class. That is still a sensible fit for cartoons, TV, YouTube, and relaxed movie nights, especially when the room is dark and the screen size is kept realistic. If you are shopping for crisp text, bright sports in the afternoon, or a projector that carries authority across a large living room, this is the wrong lane.

Pros

  • Built-in Android 14 keeps casual streaming simple and cable-light.
  • Auto keystone and 270° rotation make tight-room setup much less annoying.
  • Wi‑Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, HDMI, and USB give it flexible everyday connectivity.
  • Compact 0.4 kg build is easy to move between rooms or take outside.

Cons

  • Native 720P resolution limits fine text and makes it a poor pick for buyers chasing a sharper theater image.
  • Best results depend on dim-room viewing, so it is not the right choice for bright daytime spaces.
  • 8GB storage leaves less room for a heavy app library than a larger smart platform.
  • Built-in audio is convenient, but larger external speakers still make more sense for movie nights.

Community

User reviews

The pattern is straightforward: people tend to like how quickly this projector gets from box to playback, and they tend to cool on it when they expect a brighter, sharper home-theater image than a compact 720P unit can reasonably deliver. The useful lesson is that the built-in Android experience is the real convenience win here, while the room-light and image-sharpness limits define where the value stops.

Tyler

I’ve been really happy with this TOPTRO projector so far. Setup was quick and easy, and having the built-in Android system is super convenient—I can watch Netflix, YouTube, and more without plugging anything else in.

Cole

I am honestly shocked by how much this tiny projector can do. It’s about the size of a water bottle, but the built-in Android 13 system is snappy and actually works—I had YouTube and Prime Video running in minutes.

Juan

I recently purchased this projector and so far the experience has been very positive. The image quality is good for the price, the brightness is decent in a dim room, and the setup was very easy. The sound is.

Bob

Pros Pretty bright. The contrast between the blacks and colors is really good. As far as I can tell on a white screen when its dark the blacks were black and not grey like I see other reviewers of.

Comparison

Attribute TOPTRO TP2 Current Aurzen D001 VISSPL Q5 YGSKK Mini
Price $99.98 $119.99 $119.96 -
Resolution 1280 x 720 Native 1080P (1920 x 1080) 1920 x 1080 1920 x 1080
Wireless Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4 2.4GHz and 5GHz WiFi, Bluetooth 5.1 WiFi 6 Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3
Inputs HDMI and USB HD In*1, USB*2, Audio Out*1, AV In*1 3.5mm Jack, Bluetooth, HDMI, USB, Wi-Fi -
Audio Two-way Bluetooth audio 2*8W speakers with Dolby Audio Bluetooth 5.2 connection Built-in speaker
Editorial score 76/100 77/100 74/100 77/100

Against the HAPPRUN H1, the TP2 is the easier pick if you care more about built-in smart streaming and wireless convenience than a straightforward 1080P projection route. The H1 has the clearer native resolution story, so it fits buyers who want a more traditional image-first mini projector, while the TP2 is better for someone who wants the projector itself to behave like a small streaming box.

Compared with the YGSKK Mini, the TP2 leans harder into the smart-platform side with Android 14 and two-way Bluetooth 5.4, while the YGSKK route is more about a 1080P panel and up to 300 ANSI lumens. That makes the YGSKK the more logical choice if image sharpness and a more presentation-like brightness story matter more, while the TP2 is the better fit for casual room-to-room entertainment and fewer accessories.

The ClokoWe HY300 PRO+ is the closest route if you mainly want a compact 720P mini projector with dual-band Wi‑Fi and a light body. The TP2 wins when you want the more modern software stack, Wi‑Fi 6, and Bluetooth 5.4 in one package, but the HY300 PRO+ remains the simpler comparison point for buyers who are mostly weighing small size and basic home use rather than app-rich convenience.

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Is the TOPTRO TP2 projector worth it?

The TOPTRO TP2 makes the most sense for buyers who want a compact, app-ready projector for bedrooms, casual movie nights, and easy room-to-room use. Its strongest case is convenience: Android 14, Wi‑Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, auto keystone, and a 270° rotating stand all reduce setup friction, and the current deal price keeps it in a reasonable value lane for that use. If that is the route you want, it is an easy model to like, especially if you check the current offer and want a small projector that behaves like a self-contained streamer. The clearest reason to skip it is image ambition. Native 720P, dim-room bias, and modest onboard storage mean it is not the right buy for anyone who wants a brighter, sharper home-theater centerpiece or a projector that can stay convincing in more ambient light. For that buyer, a more image-first alternative is the better route; for everyone else, the TP2 is a practical portable mini projector with a strong convenience story.

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FAQ

Is this better for streaming or for wired sources?

Streaming is the main appeal because Android 14 and Wi‑Fi 6 reduce the need for extra devices, but HDMI and USB keep laptops, sticks, and other sources easy to use.

Can it handle a bright living room?

No, this is a dim-room projector first, and it makes the most sense when the lights are low and the viewing setup is controlled.

Editorial team

Daily Device Reviews editorial team

The Daily Device Reviews editorial team reviews product specs, prices, availability, visible customer feedback, and buying signals to keep reviews useful and up to date.