The Nebula Capsule 3 packs a serious punch in a quite literally pint sized package. My last experience with portable projectors was a few years ago and my, how things have changed.First, this thing exudes quality. The projector is the size of a pint glass but feels very substantial. The black plastic body is a fine mesh with plenty of ventilation 3/4 of the way around, with power switches and ports at the rear and a minimalist touch control panel on top. An RF remote offers easy use as well.The picture quality is really quite good. It's visible projected on a plain wall in a lit room, though that's not optimal. Darken the room and it comes to life. Shine it at a screen in pitch black and it's a movie theater. The automatic focus, keystone, and optional obstacle detection just do what they are supposed to and otherwise get out of the way - like smart technology should do. Instead of setting up a projector, tweaking this and that feature, you set it down, turn it on, it does a little calibration and you're good to go. It's honestly very impressive.The Google TV interface is a plus for me. It's the interface I've grown to like on my main TV, and having all the same stuff here in my projector is just great. I can queue up a movie on the TV and easily get to it on the projector later. I haven't had any noticable lag, except with one setup where I happened to put the projector on a shelf in a spot that must have had bad WiFi strength. When I started playing a movie I had frames dropping and a little bit of stuttering and buffering. I moved the projector, it redid its calibration, and everything went back to good. From everything I can tell that was an environmental problem, not a projector problem.Sound quality is impressive for this little device, too. It has no problem filling the living room with full sound. I don't find myself wanting to hook up external or Bluetooth speakers to be able to watch a movie on it.The battery life seems to be as advertised. I can watch a movie and have some battery left, which lines up with the advertised 2.5 hour life. Charging through USB-C is reasonably fast. I did notice that the projector did not charge on my existing USB-C PD charger but required me to use the included one.The projector has its own app, too, that includes some neat features. You can project atmosphere videos like space or the beach, or even a giant clock. It's a little extra bit of fun.The only quibble I have is actually one that Anker put in front of me themselves with that app. In the instructional videos included with the app, there was a video about how to use the folding stand. This sent me digging back through the box and packing materials -- had I missed an accessory? It would be super handy to be able to tilt the projector or shine it up at the ceiling. But no, I hadn't. It's an extra accessory I can purchase. As is a travel case. Both of those things would be really useful for what is supposed to be a travel projector. I get that there are several styles of stands, but including the case and the compact folding stand would make it feel like a true full package.Overall, this projector is a huge winner for bringing movies anywhere there's WiFi. It's not the projector you want to build your home theater with, sure. But it does for streaming movies what a good Bluetooth speaker does for music - makes it possible to start a party and enjoy almost anywhere with minimum hassle. Just set it up, turn it on, dim the lights and watch.