How to create the perfect home cinema (without a dedicated room)

There’s a persistent myth that a proper home cinema requires a dedicated room — a blacked-out basement with acoustic panels, ceiling-mounted equipment, and tiered seating. That myth keeps people watching films on their laptops when they could be watching them on a 100-inch screen.

The truth is that the best home cinemas we’ve seen are living rooms. They’re the rooms where you already spend your evenings, and with the right equipment, they transform from “watching a show” to “having an experience” in the time it takes to dim the lights.

This guide covers every decision you’ll need to make: projector versus TV, which projector categories matter, how to match your sound to your screen, and how to tie it all together with lighting that puts you in cinema mode.

Projector vs. TV — when a projector wins

The honest answer is that both have their place, and the right choice depends on your room and your priorities.

A TV wins when you have a bright room with lots of windows, you watch primarily during daylight hours, or your main viewing distance is under three metres. Modern OLED and QLED panels look exceptional, and they require zero setup beyond mounting.

A projector wins when you want screen size that a TV physically cannot match (80–150 inches), you primarily watch in the evening, and you want the cinematic immersion that only a truly large image can deliver.

The hybrid option: Samsung The Frame ($1,799 CAD for 55”). The Frame bridges the gap — during the day it displays art, in the evening it’s a stunning QLED display. We carry it in 55”, 65”, and 75” sizes.

Sound that matches the picture

A 100-inch projected image paired with tinny built-in projector speakers is like a luxury car with bicycle tyres. Sound is half the cinema experience — arguably more. Invest here.

The simple route

Sonos Beam Gen 2 ($599 CAD) — The soundbar we recommend most often. Dolby Atmos support, clear dialogue, surprisingly powerful bass for its size, and seamless integration with the Sonos ecosystem. For a living room cinema, one Beam placed below your projection surface will make a dramatic improvement over any projector’s built-in audio.

Sonos Arc ($1,199 CAD) — The step up. 11 drivers, full Dolby Atmos, and a wider, more immersive soundstage than the Beam. If your living room cinema is your primary entertainment space, the Arc is worth the premium.

The premium route

Devialet Dione ($3,190 CAD) — Seventeen drivers, Dolby Atmos, and Devialet’s proprietary SAM processing. The sound is room-filling, precise, and powerful. It also happens to be one of the most beautiful soundbars ever designed.

Bang & Olufsen Beosound Theatre ($6,499 CAD) — The statement piece. 12 custom drivers, Dolby Atmos, machined aluminium, and the kind of build quality that justifies the price. For someone building a living room cinema that’s as beautiful as it is functional, nothing else compares.

Adding a subwoofer

Bass is what separates “watching a film” from “feeling a film.”

Sonos Sub Mini ($579 CAD) — A compact, cylindrical sub that pairs wirelessly with any Sonos soundbar. Perfect for small-to-medium rooms.

Sonos Sub Gen 3 ($999 CAD) — For larger rooms or deeper, more authoritative bass. Pair it with the Arc for a home cinema sound system that genuinely rivals dedicated separates.

Lighting for cinema mode

This is where smart lighting transforms a living room cinema from good to immersive. Two concepts matter: bias lighting and ambient scene lighting.

Philips Hue Gradient Lightstrip ($229 CAD) — Mount this behind your screen for smooth, multi-colour bias lighting. With the Philips Hue Sync Box ($349 CAD), the lightstrip matches the colours on screen in real time. The immersion factor is remarkable.

A pair of Philips Hue Play Light Bars ($169 CAD) behind a console or on a shelf, set to a dim, warm tone, gives the room just enough light to navigate without disrupting the picture. Create a “Cinema” scene in the Hue app for a one-tap transition from living room to cinema.

Three complete cinema setups

The Weeknight Cinema — ~$1,500

Projector Samsung The Freestyle $999
Sound Sonos Roam 2 $229
Lighting Hue Play Light Bars (2-pack) $169

Cinema as a lifestyle — portable, flexible, and fun. Take the whole setup to the cottage, the patio, or the bedroom.

The Living Room Theatre — ~$3,500

Projector XGIMI Horizon Ultra $2,199
Sound Sonos Beam Gen 2 $599
Lighting Hue Gradient Lightstrip $229
Lighting Hue Play Light Bars (2-pack) $169

The setup we recommend most. Stunning 4K Dolby Vision picture, Dolby Atmos sound, and smart lighting that transitions from living room to theatre in one tap.

The Reference Experience — $8,000+

Projector Samsung The Premiere LSP9T $6,499
Sound Sonos Arc $1,199
Subwoofer Sonos Sub Gen 3 $999
Lighting Hue Sync Box $349
Lighting Hue Gradient Lightstrip $229

This is the system that makes visitors quietly rethink their own living rooms. 130-inch triple-laser image, full Dolby Atmos with deep bass, and lighting that syncs to everything on screen.

Practical tips

Cable management matters. A single visible HDMI cable running across a wall will undermine the entire aesthetic. Use paintable cable channels or run cables behind the wall. For UST projectors, cable management is simpler — everything sits on or near your credenza.

Seating distance. For a 100-inch projected image, ideal seating distance is roughly 2.5–3.5 metres. For a 120-inch image, push back to 3–4 metres. The sweet spot is where the image fills your field of vision without requiring you to move your head to see the edges.

Sound placement. Place your soundbar directly below your projection area. A subwoofer can go almost anywhere in the room — bass is non-directional.

Projector maintenance. Modern laser projectors require virtually no maintenance — the laser light source lasts 20,000–30,000 hours. This is one of many reasons we recommend laser projectors.

Your cinema is already built

Your living room is the room. All you need to do is choose your setup.

Shop Home Theatre →

Published in The Edit — the ACE Home editorial journal. For more guides, recommendations, and honest opinions on home technology, explore The Edit.

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