True 4K vs pixel-shift 4K
Native (true) 4K vs pixel-shift 4K (XPR) projectors compared — real pixels, sharpness, price and examples. Which 4K actually matters.
Native 4K projectors put 8.3 million real pixels on screen; pixel-shift (XPR) projectors flash a 1080p or 2.7K chip 2-4 times per frame to approximate 4K. Native is slightly sharper on fine detail but costs much more; pixel-shift looks 4K to most eyes at normal viewing distance and covers nearly all affordable "4K" projectors.
Almost every projector sold as "4K" under a few thousand dollars is pixel-shift (XPR), where a smaller DLP or 3LCD chip rapidly shifts its pixels to paint a full 4K grid. True native 4K uses an LCoS or chip with all 8.3M pixels at once and is found in premium models. At a normal seating distance the difference is subtle; resolution rarely decides the picture as much as brightness and contrast.
Native 4K vs pixel-shift 4K
| Native (true) 4K | Pixel-shift 4K (XPR) | |
|---|---|---|
| Pixels on screen | 8.3M real pixels | 1080p/2.7K chip shifted 2-4x |
| Fine-detail sharpness | Slightly sharper | Very close at normal distance |
| Price | Premium | Most affordable "4K" projectors |
| Example | Sony VPL-XW5000ES | Epson, BenQ, Optoma 4K |
| Best for | Maximum detail, big budget | Best value, looks 4K to most |