Optoma UHD38 review: Supersize your gaming

A solid home cinema projector, the Optoma UHD38 is also seriously good for gaming
Written By
Published on 14 July 2021
Our rating
Reviewed price £896 inc. VAT
Pros
  • Minimal input lag
  • 1080p at up to 240fps
  • Bright, detailed 4K images
Cons
  • Grey-ish black level
  • HDR can’t hit TV levels

The Optoma UHD38 is a low-cost 4K projector on a mission. Sure, its a capable home cinema projector with HDR support and everything you need to enjoy UHD Blu-ray and streaming services, but its real focus is on gaming, with features to minimise input lag and boost colour vibrancy and contrast.

If youve never played games on a projector, then you might not understand the point. TVs and monitors can give you higher HDR brightness levels, wider colour gamuts, better clarity and higher refresh rates. However, having spent a few evenings with the Optoma UHD38 and with other projectors before it I can tell you that nothing bar a VR headset beats a projector when it comes to immersion. Games should be bigger than life, and the UHD38 makes damn sure that they are.

READ NEXT: The best gaming monitor to buy

In theory, the UHD38 is a 4K, HDR projector, although in practice there are a few caveats. First, it doesnt have a native 4K resolution, instead using Texas Instruments 0.47in DMD DLP chip to generate a 4K image from 1080p hardware via pixel shifting.

Each pixel on the chip changes position four times for each frame at 60fps, shifting very slightly between each update to create a new pixel on the screen. It isnt quite real 4K, but its close enough that bodies such as the Consumer Technology Association dont make a distinction.

UHD38 DLP UHD 4000 ANSI Lumens

UHD38 DLP UHD 4000 ANSI Lumens

£889.00

Check price

As far as HDR goes, the UHD38 supports HDR10 and HLG and has an output of 4,000 lumens, which you might think would be more than enough for convincing HDR. However, by the time youve get those 4,000 lumens to the screen, and that screen reflects them back in the direction of your eyeballs, youre getting way below the 600cd/m² required for a decent HDR image, let alone the 1,000cd/m² or more required for true HDR.

This is true of all consumer projectors and, while it tries its best with tone mapping and the levels of brightness and contrast on offer, the UHD38 cant pull off miracles on this account.

Its real strength, however, is gaming. It will work with consoles or PCs at 4K/60Hz, 1080p/120Hz or even 1080p/240Hz if you have a PC fast enough to keep up. And, if you engage the Enhanced gaming mode, input lag drops to a thoroughly responsive 16.7, 8.9 and 4.2ms respectively. Theres also a Gaming mode in the Image Settings that boosts colour and contrast over the more natural Cinema mode, with rather pleasing results. You can have all this goodness with a screen size of up to 300 inches, and while I dont have a screen that size to try it out, I can report that at 100 inches, games are just as jaw-dropping and absorbing as you could possibly hope for.

READ NEXT: The best gaming monitor to buy

There arent many 4K projectors available for around £1,000. BenQ has the well-regarded TK800M for approximately £1,000 to £1,100, along with a new, more gaming-centric model, the TK700S Ti, for around £1,200.

Beyond that, youre looking at £1,500 to £2,500 for the more serious, step-up 4K models, and north of £4,000 before you hit native 4K projectors from the likes of Sony. Within Optomas own line-up, you can step down to the less powerful 3,600-lumen UHD35. You might think the UHD42 would sit above it in the range, but its older and has a lower spec in some areas, so cant be considered a step up.

Unless youre willing to spend another £200 or so, the Optoma UHD38s biggest rivals arent other projectors, but big-screen TVs with gaming features such as HDMI 2.1 support, 120Hz playback and Variable Refresh Rate support.

The LG 65NANO866NA can now be found for under £1,000, while Samsungs Q65 QLED models have strong gaming capabilities and give you plenty of screen for similar money. You wont hit 100 inches (let alone 300), but youll get more detail and more impressive, impactful HDR.

Optoma UHD35 data projector Standard focal projector 3600 ANSI lumens DLP 2160p (3840x2160) 3D White

Optoma UHD35 data projector Standard focal projector 3600 ANSI lumens DLP 2160p (3840×2160) 3D White

£839.54

Check price

Optoma has evolved its physical design over the last generation or so, moving from the ribbed surfaces and open grills of the old UHD40 to an off-white box with cleaner lines, more decorative vents and a few more curves. The onboard controls are on the top, while all the connections sit at the rear. Youll also notice that the foot at the front of the unit screws inwards and outwards to give you a little upwards tilt.

Theres a manual focus ring on the lens along with a zoom lever on the top, although this doesnt give you a huge amount of flexibility, as it offers a mere 1.1x of zoom at its maximum range. With a 1.5:1 throw ratio, the Optoma isnt exactly what youd call a short throw projector, so you need a bit of space to get the most from it. For a 100in 16:9 image, for instance, youll need around 3.3m to play with. If you can only find 2m, youre looking at a measly 60in screen.

Whats more, it isnt the most convenient projector when it comes to positioning. You can place it on a table or mount it on the ceiling, while rear-projection is an option. However, youre limited to basic horizontal and vertical keystone correction rather than any kind of image-shift adjustment, plus one of those notoriously fiddly corner adjustments which always seem to correct one issue while causing another.

In terms of connectivity, the UHD38 gives you everything you need bar a DisplayPort input. For video, theres an old-school VGA input plus two HDMI 2.0 ports, both supporting 4K/60 or 1080p at up to 120Hz. That means no 4K at 120Hz through HDMI 2.1, although I suspect thats beyond the TI DLP chip in any case. For audio, meanwhile, you have an S/PDIF output plus a 3.5mm line-in and matching line-out.

Theres no Bluetooth audio as you get with some projectors, but its probably safe to assume that most users will either have a full surround speaker setup or at least a soundbar, and you can usually get some kind of wireless headphone audio directly from your console or media device.

READ NEXT: The best gaming headset for consoles

Lets get the gripes straight out of the way. If youre looking for a projector for home cinema or general entertainment, the UHD38 isnt the best weve seen. Dont get me wrong; its still very good. You wouldnt really know that it isnt native 4K because its pictures have superb definition and come crammed with detail. Colours are extremely rich and vibrant but not over-pushed or unnatural looking, particularly if you stick to the Cinema preset.

There are, however, three problems. First, while its bright, you need to be realistic about HDR content. Watching 4K HDR Blu-rays and Disney+ video streams, you can see that there are HDR effects in place, but the colours and highlights dont zing in the way they do on a good HDR TV. To be honest, thats something thats common to all consumer projectors.

Black levels are another matter. Even the UHD38s deepest black looks grey-ish, and the lowest black luminance level I measured was 2.79cd/m². Combine that with the relatively limited brightness of the projected image around 255cd/m² when measured 30cm from the screen and youre not going to get the kind of shadow detail or dynamic range that you might see on more expensive 4K projectors, not to mention a good UHD TV.

You can push the brightness up beyond this, of course, and the projector even has a special Bright mode. However, the higher you go, the worse the black level becomes and the more the colour drifts, amplifying some rather pushy greens into something approaching a tint.

But heres the good news: as long as you can accept the limited HDR capabilities and the fact that space doesnt look inky black, the opening space battle from a 4K Blu-ray of Star Wars: Episode 8 The Last Jedi still looks fantastic.

The laser cannon fire and explosions paint the screen with energy and colour, and youre soon too absorbed to fuss about any shortcomings. It was a similar scenario with scenes from the mighty Thor: Ragnarok on Disney+, not to mention The Incredibles and Star Wars: The Bad Batch. Ignore the black level and theres plenty of detail, drama and excitement. Dynamic range matters, but size still means a lot.

And these issues fade away even further once you start playing games on this thing. I kicked off with a series of Xbox One X favourites, including Halo 5: Guardians and Doom (2016), and theres something bold and epic about the UHD38s presentation that drags you, kicking and screaming, into the Master Chiefs epic odyssey, Mars or the depths of Hell. Theres enough shadow detail to see whats happening in dark corners, while the rich and vibrant colours contribute to some spectacular action. The handling of HDR colours and highlights seems more confident and assured, too.

UHD38 DLP UHD 4000 ANSI Lumens

UHD38 DLP UHD 4000 ANSI Lumens

£889.00

Check price

Switch to a next-gen console and things only get better. Theres enough definition and dynamic range to make the likes of Ratchet and Clank: Rift Apart and Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War look fantastic, and the 1080p/120fps option on the latter is beautifully fluid, without a hint of lag, jerky panning or stutter with the Enhanced Gaming mode turned on.

I was also able to get DiRT5 running at 1080p/120 on the Xbox Series S, and Codemasters under-rated off-road racer was incredibly fluid.

I was also surprised to find that the UHD38s brightness levels make it usable during the day. In a bright room youll lose some of the colour and contrast, but you dont have to wait until the sun has headed over the horizon or close every curtain just to get a watchable image. However, the Eco mode is probably worth avoiding if you want to get the best in either light or dark situations, as the image gets noticeably dimmer and less contrast-rich.

Eco mode will take the lamp life from 4,000 hours up to 10,000, but is it a compromise too far? Well, yes. The only worry is that if youre a serious five-hours-a-night gamer, you might burn through that lamp within two or three years.

READ NEXT: The best Nintendo Switch controller

The UHD38 is a good home cinema projector with rather underwhelming black levels, but its a great projector if youre into gaming. It will do 4K/60 on your Xbox Series X or PS5, or 1080p/120 if you value high refresh rates over resolution, and it will do it with virtually no significant input lag.

And while youll find TVs at the same price with better connectivity, more contrast or stronger HDR, its worth accepting a few trade-offs just to play on a massive screen. Gaming just doesnt get more epic than this.

Written by

Stuart Andrews has been writing about technology and computing for over 25 years and has written for nearly every major UK PC and tech outlet, including PC Pro and the Sunday Times. He still writes about PCs, laptops and enterprise computing, plus PC and console gaming, but he also likes to get his hands dirty with the latest gardening tools and chill out with his favourite movies. He loves to test things and will benchmark anything and everything that comes his way.

More about
OSZAR »