The room with the door that closes. A 4K laser projector on a 120-inch acoustic screen (so dialogue comes from the actors' mouths), a 7.1 receiver driving front towers, surrounds, and a 12-inch sub, and acoustic treatment so dialogue cuts and bass hits. This is a cinema that happens to be in your house.
Plans
Choose a plan that fits your needs and budget
Item List
7Immersive Sound
4 items| Item | Category | Specs | Qty | Price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Speakers | Driver12 in TypePowered Output500 W | 1 | $500 | View Shop | |
| Speakers | Channels7.1 Power100 W/ch FormatAtmos-ready | 1 | $700 | View Shop | |
| Speakers | TypeFloor-standing Drivers3 Pair2 | 1 | $600 | View Shop | |
| Speakers | TypeBookshelf Pair2 MountWall | 1 | $300 | View Shop |
Projection
2 itemsRoom Treatment
1 items| Item | Category | Specs | Qty | Price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Booth Setup | Panels24 Traps8 TypeDiffuser + wedge | 1 | $200 | View Shop |
Immersive Sound
4Room Treatment
1FAQ
Common questions about this kit
Projector or TV for a dedicated room?
Projector. At 120 inches nothing competes for the cinema feel, and a light-controlled room is exactly where projectors shine. Save TVs for multi-use living rooms.
Why an acoustic screen?
The front-center speaker sits behind it, so dialogue comes from the actors' mouths, not from below the screen. It is the detail that sells the theater illusion.
7.1 over 5.1?
In a dedicated room, yes. The two rear surrounds wrap sound around you for immersion that 5.1 cannot. For a living room, 5.1 is plenty.
Do I need to treat the room?
Yes. Bare drywall reflects sound into a muddy mess. Panels and bass traps tighten dialogue and bass — the biggest single upgrade after the screen.
User Reviews
Dedicated home theater is the projector-and-7.1 version of my battlestation. Acoustic treatment is the upgrade nobody skips twice.