
Aurzen Eazze D1 Smart Projector 4K Support with Netflix
The built-in Netflix is the real selling point here, but the smarter read is to treat it as a Full HD projector with handy auto setup.
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- 4,196 reviews gives you enough buyer feedback to spot repeat complaints.
- This is a bigger spend, so it needs a clearer case than a cheap add-on.
Check the live Amazon price, seller, delivery timing, and returns before you decide.
If specs, bundle contents, or compatibility matter for this kind of product, that is usually where the final decision gets made.
Aurzen Eazze D1 Smart Projector 4K Support with Netflix
This smart home projector sits in the budget end of cinema kit, aimed at casual film nights, kids' rooms and spare-room setups rather than a full home cinema. The draw is built-in Netflix, Prime Video and YouTube, plus auto focus and keystone to make setup less fiddly.
Built-in Netflix at this price is the bit that makes it more convenient than a lot of cheap projectors that still need a stick plugged in. The review history is deep enough to take it seriously, but the listing also says native 1080P with 4K support, so go in expecting Full HD projection, not a true native 4K machine.
With projectors like this, worry less about big 4K wording and more about native resolution, brightness, app support and how much setup they need. A cheaper model with proper streaming apps and easy alignment can be the better buy for casual viewing than a spec sheet that sounds grander than the picture.
- Handy if you want a simple bedroom or spare-room projector without adding a Fire TV Stick.
- Works better for film nights and casual streaming than for someone chasing a full home cinema setup.
- Useful when quick setup matters, since auto focus and keystone should cut down the usual projector faff.
- Skip it if you specifically want native 4K projection, because the listing points to native 1080P with 4K support.
- Less suitable for a bright living room in daytime, as budget projectors usually make more sense after dark.
- Pass if you already plan to use an external streamer and would rather put the budget into picture quality first.
- Check the native resolution wording carefully. The page mentions native 1080P and 4K support, which are not the same thing.
- Confirm which streaming apps are preinstalled in the UK version, especially Netflix, Prime Video and YouTube.
- Look for HDMI, USB and audio output details if you may still connect a console, stick or soundbar.
- Read the brightness and throw-distance details to judge whether it suits your room size and lighting.
At £94.97, this looks like a fair spend for a smart projector with built-in streaming and auto setup, though it sits near the top of this price band and the native 1080P spec is the trade-off.
Is this a native 4K projector?
Not from the listing as written. It says native 1080P and 4K support, which usually means it can accept a 4K signal but projects in Full HD.
Does it have Netflix built in?
The listing says yes, alongside Prime Video and YouTube. It is still worth confirming the UK app setup and any sign-in limits on the product page.
What kind of setup is this best suited to?
It looks more at home in a bedroom, spare room or casual movie-night setup than in a dedicated home cinema where higher brightness and native 4K matter more.







