XGIMI is pushing deeper into premium home cinema with the global launch of the TITAN Noir Series, a new family of 4K projectors built for large-format entertainment, gaming, live sports, and serious movie nights. The lineup includes three models: TITAN Noir Max, TITAN Noir Pro, and TITAN Noir, giving home theater fans different entry points into the same flagship projector family without pretending that everyone has a dedicated cinema cave under the stairs.
The headline feature across the series is the world’s first Dual Intelligent Iris System, designed to improve light control and contrast performance. Instead of simply blasting brightness at the wall and hoping your eyes forgive it, the system helps the projector manage darker scenes, bright highlights, and shadow detail with more precision. For users who care about black levels, HDR impact, and cinematic depth, this is the part of the spec sheet that actually matters.
A Three-Model Lineup For Different Home Cinema Setups
The TITAN Noir Series arrives with three variants: TITAN Noir Max, TITAN Noir Pro, and TITAN Noir. The Max model sits at the top of the lineup, targeting users who want the strongest performance available in the series. The Pro appears positioned as the middle option, while the standard TITAN Noir offers a more accessible starting point for buyers who still want the core experience of the new projector family.
This three-tier approach makes sense for a premium projector launch because not every living room, media room, or home theater build needs the same level of brightness or hardware. Some users want a massive screen for movies and sports, while others want a high-end 4K projector mainly for flexible living room entertainment. XGIMI is clearly trying to cover both the enthusiast crowd and buyers stepping up from more conventional smart projectors.
Dual Intelligent Iris And Native Contrast
The biggest technical story here is the 10,000:1 native contrast capability enabled by the Dual Intelligent Iris System. Native contrast is especially important for projectors because it directly affects how convincing dark scenes look. A projector can be very bright and still look flat if black levels are weak, which is the kind of home cinema tragedy nobody deserves after paying premium money.
By controlling light more intelligently, the TITAN Noir Series is designed to preserve detail in both bright and dark areas of the image. This should be useful for cinematic content where mood, depth, and shadow detail are part of the storytelling. In simpler terms, dark scenes should look less washed out, highlights should feel more controlled, and the image should have more visual punch than a basic high-brightness projector.
Brightness, Color, And 4K Picture Performance
The flagship TITAN Noir Max is rated at up to 7,000 ISO lumens, making it suitable for large screen projection and more demanding viewing environments. That brightness level is paired with an RGB triple-laser engine, which should help deliver stronger color performance than traditional lamp-based projection systems. For big-screen users, brightness is not just about being flashy; it helps maintain clarity when screen size increases.
The Max model also supports Dolby Vision, HDR10+, and IMAX Enhanced, giving it a feature set aimed squarely at premium home cinema. XGIMI lists 110% BT.2020 color coverage and Delta E below 0.8 for the Max, suggesting strong color accuracy and wide color reproduction. That combination should appeal to users who want movies to look rich without turning every face into an overcooked tomato.
Gaming And Large-Format Entertainment
Beyond movies, the TITAN Noir Series is also being pitched for gaming and live sports. The Max model supports up to 240Hz gaming, which should make it more interesting for players who care about motion smoothness on a very large display. A high refresh rate on a projector is not just a bragging-rights number; it can make fast gameplay feel more responsive and visually cleaner.
XGIMI also highlights its role as the official partner of EA SPORTS FC 26, positioning the TITAN Noir Series as a projector lineup for stadium-style viewing at home. That angle fits naturally with large-format projection, especially for football games, racing, action titles, and multiplayer sessions where screen size can make the experience feel more immersive. Apparently, losing a match is more cinematic when it happens at wall size.
Final Thoughts
The TITAN Noir Series looks like XGIMI’s most ambitious move yet in premium consumer projection, especially with its combination of RGB triple-laser technology, Dual Intelligent Iris contrast control, 4K resolution, HDR format support, and gaming-focused refresh rates. The TITAN Noir Max is clearly the model with the strongest confirmed specification list, while the Pro and standard Noir broaden the lineup for buyers with different budgets.
Orders for the series are now open through Kickstarter, with introductory pricing listed at $2,999 for TITAN Noir Max, $2,699 for TITAN Noir Pro, and $2,499 for TITAN Noir. Shipping is planned for June, and XGIMI is also offering launch pricing on accessories including a 100-inch Ascend Floor-Rising Screen, ceiling mount, and X-Floor Stand Ultra. For users building a big-screen home theater setup, XGIMI has made the TITAN Noir Series look like a serious alternative to oversized TVs.
| Feature | TITAN Noir Max | TITAN Noir Pro | TITAN Noir |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product Type | Premium 4K projector | 4K projector | 4K projector |
| Positioning | Flagship model | Mid-tier model | Entry model in the series |
| Display Resolution | 4K | 4K | 4K |
| Light Engine | RGB triple-laser engine | Not specified | Not specified |
| Brightness | Up to 7,000 ISO lumens | Not specified | Not specified |
| Contrast | Up to 10,000:1 native contrast | Series supports up to 10,000:1 native contrast | Series supports up to 10,000:1 native contrast |
| Iris System | Dual Intelligent Iris System | Dual Intelligent Iris System | Dual Intelligent Iris System |
| HDR Support | IMAX Enhanced, Dolby Vision, HDR10+ | Not specified | Not specified |
| Color Coverage | 110% BT.2020 | Not specified | Not specified |
| Color Accuracy | Delta E < 0.8 | Not specified | Not specified |
| Chipset | MT9681 | Not specified | Not specified |
| Memory and Storage | 4GB + 64GB | Not specified | Not specified |
| Gaming Performance | Up to 240Hz | Series supports up to 240Hz | Series supports up to 240Hz |
| Introductory Price | $2,999 | $2,699 | $2,499 |
| MSRP | $5,999 | $4,999 | $3,999 |
| Expected Shipping | June | June | June |





