XGIMI Google TV Projectors 2026: What's Confirmed Before You Buy
XGIMI has announced three new projectors marketed alongside Google TV messaging, with preorders opening June 25. The Elfin Flip 4K, Elfin Flip Laser, and MIRA ultra-short-throw projector occupy very different corners of the living-room market, but the company's naming obscures three distinct use cases that point to genuinely different buyers, according to XGIMI's official blog earlier this month.
Full OS implementation details for the Elfin and MIRA models have not been formally confirmed in XGIMI's teaser materials. The Google TV connection applies to other XGIMI hardware, including the Horizon 20, which HomeCineSolutions confirmed runs the platform two weeks ago. For the new trio, software specifics remain unresolved.
What the new XGIMI projectors 2026 lineup actually includes
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Two of these products solve the same problem: a compact projector that earns its place in a room by disappearing when the session ends. Both Elfin models use a flip-out stand that doubles as the tilt axis, letting them sit on a table, project onto a wall or screen, and fold flat when not in use. Neither carries a built-in battery, following the same approach as XGIMI's existing 1080p Elfin, Android Authority noted today. These are plug-in devices in compact packaging, not cordless grab-and-go units.
The XGIMI MIRA ultra-short-throw projector is a different category entirely. Ultra-short-throw projectors sit inches from a wall and require precise distance calibration to produce a clean image. The MIRA is designed for permanent, fixed placement, and its announced specs reflect that ambition: native 4K output at a claimed 2,000 ISO lumens, HDR10+ support, and a 2.1-channel Harman Kardon audio system with 360-degree output, per Android Authority. Measured against the confirmed specs of the two Elfin models, the MIRA is a more capable home cinema setup on paper, though several critical specifications including throw ratio and screen-size range remain unconfirmed in available materials.
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Elfin Flip Laser vs. Elfin Flip 4K: the name that misleads
The XGIMI Elfin Flip Laser sounds like the premium model. On the specs that matter most for most buyers, it isn't.
The Laser is specified to use a triple-laser light source and tops out at 1080p/60Hz. The XGIMI Elfin Flip 4K supports both 4K at 60Hz and 1080p at 120Hz. Both include variable refresh rate, but VRR at 1080p/60Hz is table stakes for gaming projectors at this point. The 4K model's 1080p/120Hz capability is the more meaningful differentiator for console and PC gamers running high-frame-rate titles, Android Authority reported.
There's a catch worth understanding before deciding. XGIMI has not confirmed what light source the Elfin Flip 4K uses. Android Authority observed it appears to use a traditional lamp rather than laser illumination, but XGIMI's teaser materials don't address this directly. If that holds, the naming trade-off is stark: the model called "Laser" has confirmed laser illumination and 1080p output; the model called "4K" has 4K output and an unresolved light source. Buyers should treat that specification as open until XGIMI publishes complete specs.
Audio is a non-factor between the two Elfin models. Both ship with a single 7W speaker tuned by Harman Kardon, per Android Authority.
Japanese pricing gives some sense of the gap: the Elfin Flip 4K is priced at 206,800 yen (approximately $1,290) and the Elfin Flip Laser at 139,800 yen (approximately $890), Android Authority reported. No US pricing has been announced. Those figures should not be read as a US price prediction. XGIMI's other projectors have historically landed higher in the US market than equivalent foreign pricing suggests.
On the announced specs, the Elfin Flip 4K has the broader resolution and gaming capability. The Elfin Flip Laser is the better choice if a confirmed laser light engine is the priority and native 4K output isn't a requirement. Neither belongs in a conversation about battery-powered portable projectors.
What the launch materials don't yet confirm
The gap between what XGIMI has confirmed and what buyers need before spending money is wide enough to matter.
Confirmed across all three models: the Elfin fold-flat design, triple-laser light source on the Elfin Flip Laser, 4K/60Hz and 1080p/120Hz on the Elfin Flip 4K, VRR on both Elfin units, 7W Harman Kardon audio per Elfin model, MIRA's 4K output at a claimed 2,000 ISO lumens with HDR10+ and 2.1-channel Harman Kardon audio. China pricing for the MIRA sits at approximately $960, per Android Authority, and Japanese pricing is confirmed for both Elfin models.
Unconfirmed as of today:
- Light source technology for the Elfin Flip 4K (appears to be a traditional lamp, but XGIMI has not stated this)
- Brightness, throw ratio, minimum and maximum screen size, input lag, and HDMI version for all three models
- Full smart OS implementation details for the Elfin and MIRA models specifically
- US pricing for any of the three
The MIRA's missing throw ratio is particularly significant for anyone considering a purchase. Whether the unit physically fits a given room depends entirely on that number, and it isn't in any available materials. Committing to a permanent installation without it is a real risk.
One additional detail is worth reading carefully. XGIMI's official launch page lists a free 4-pack of 3D glasses with the MIRA and a free portable screen with each Elfin model, with products available exclusively on XGIMI.com, per the launch page. The company's blog describes the MIRA bundle as a 2-pack of glasses and references broader channel availability after launch, per the XGIMI blog. Both are official XGIMI sources, and they don't align. The launch page terms state promotional items are subject to availability, may be limited in quantity, and XGIMI reserves the right to modify or cancel the promotion at any time. Read the fine print before preordering around a bundle.
Preorders, pricing context, and whether to wait
Preorders open June 25 and run through July 14. Priority shipping begins July 7, roughly a week before the general July 15 launch. All three models carry a 10% discount during the preorder window, along with the hardware bundles described above, according to XGIMI's blog.
XGIMI describes this as a lineup bringing premium projection to more accessible price points. The framing makes more sense when the TITAN Noir Max is the reference point: that flagship carries a $5,999 MSRP, with Kickstarter early-bird pricing at $2,999, per PR Newswire nearly two months ago. The Kickstarter price, not the MSRP, is the honest top-of-stack comparison. The MIRA's China pricing at approximately $960 suggests meaningful distance from that tier, but without confirmed US prices, "accessible" remains a claim without a number to land on.
The buyer logic, on current information, breaks down this way. The Elfin Flip 4K suits buyers who want a compact, storable projector with 4K output and gaming-capable refresh rates, with the understanding that battery power is not part of the deal. The Elfin Flip Laser fits buyers for whom a confirmed laser light engine is the priority and native 4K is not, despite the less capable spec sheet on most other measures. The MIRA is the only option for a fixed TV-replacement setup, and its audio and HDR specs make it the most serious home cinema unit of the three on paper, though throw distance and screen-size range remain undocumented.
Buyers who need confirmed US pricing, verified brightness measurements, and independent input lag data before committing should wait for reviews after the July 15 launch. That patience is especially warranted for the MIRA, where room-fit requirements can't be assessed without the throw ratio. Those ready to preorder should account for the bundle discrepancy and treat the promotional terms as subject to change.