Soundcore Nebula P1 Turns a Garage Into a Theater

portable Nebula – Misryoum tests the portable Soundcore Nebula P1 projector for streaming games and movies, noting strong immersion and limits on brightness and contrast.
A garage movie night can feel surprisingly close to a real theater once you hit play, and Misryoum’s hands-on look at the Soundcore Nebula P1 portable projector makes that point fast.
The P1’s biggest promise is portability. and that shows in how it’s meant to be used day-to-day rather than as a replacement for a full home cinema setup.. Misryoum notes you can enhance the experience by connecting the projector to an AV receiver or a soundbar via its HDMI eARC port. which can help expand audio options beyond what the included speakers handle on their own.
Even with that context, expectations matter.. The P1 does not support certain higher-end formats and features that enthusiasts often look for in pricier models. and Misryoum found the picture performance reflects that reality.. Still. when streaming a Houston Rockets game on YouTube TV. the projector’s large screen size delivered an immersive feel. with a standout viewing experience that surprised for a space like a windowless test room and for daylight viewing in a family room.
The takeaway: the Nebula P1 is built for the joy of “move it, point it, watch it,” not for chasing the absolute best specs.
In Misryoum’s testing, brightness and contrast were the main constraints.. A sports mode setting helped add some clarity and punch. but the overall image remained more average than bright. especially noticeable in more demanding live broadcasts.. Automated picture adjustments did not deliver a dramatic improvement. suggesting the P1 is more about workable tuning than high-performance image processing.
Switching to local news coverage. Misryoum observed a slightly grainy look. and even with manual tweaks to brightness and contrast. the projector didn’t fully escape the limits of its display capabilities.. With Avatar: Fire and Ash. Misryoum saw moments of strong clarity and focus during action scenes. yet the results still didn’t land as consistently cinematic as higher-end options.
To understand what “better” looks like, Misryoum compared the P1 with an Epson LS9000 projector on the same material. The comparison highlighted differences in color richness and overall vividness, with the higher-end model showing more realistic color rendering and a fuller, more natural palette.
If you’re shopping for a portable projector, this matters because it clarifies the trade-off: the Nebula P1 focuses on big-screen convenience, while deeper contrast and higher-end color performance belong to more premium devices.
Even on Misryoum’s visual benchmark style sequences, the same themes carried through.. Winter fence footage leaned too brown where green would be expected. and sunset scenes lacked the vibrancy and contrast you typically want from a projector at this level of price.. For many viewers. that won’t be a deal-breaker. especially if your priority is creating an instant setup in a garage. backyard. or any room where you don’t want fixed installation.