Yaber projectors hit record lows: T2 at $234, L2s at $135

These are the lowest prices these models have ever reached
Both Yaber projectors have hit record lows on Amazon as limited-time deals that won't last long.

For years, the home projector remained a luxury just out of reach for most households — a promise of cinematic experience priced for the few. Two Yaber models now available on Amazon at their lowest prices ever suggest that threshold is quietly dissolving, placing large-screen home entertainment within genuine impulse-purchase range. The T2 Outdoor at $233.98 and the L2s Home Cinema at $134.98 represent not just discounts, but a broader democratization of how people might choose to gather and watch together.

  • Both Yaber projectors have hit all-time low prices on Amazon, creating a narrow, limited-time window that rewards those paying attention.
  • The T2 Outdoor's built-in battery and JBL speakers make it a genuinely portable entertainment system — backyard, patio, or a friend's living room, no outlet required.
  • The L2s Home Cinema trades portability for a larger 150-inch throw and brighter 700-lumen output, outperforming its pricier sibling in the specs that matter most for fixed home setups.
  • Neither model includes a built-in smart TV OS, but HDMI ports mean a Chromecast or Fire Stick slots right in — a small workaround for a significant price advantage.
  • At $134.98 and $233.98 respectively, these deals reframe projectors from aspirational purchases into practical ones, and the math is unlikely to stay this favorable for long.

Two Yaber projector models have dropped to their lowest prices ever on Amazon, and the numbers are hard to ignore. The T2 Outdoor is now $233.98 and the L2s Home Cinema sits at $134.98 — both limited-time offers that reflect a broader shift in what budget home entertainment can actually deliver.

The T2 Outdoor is built for movement. Its internal battery runs two and a half hours on a charge, freeing it from the wall entirely — useful for backyard setups, patios, or traveling to a friend's place. It projects up to 120 inches in Full HD at 450 lumens, solid in medium to low light. The real surprise is its audio: 8W JBL speakers that are genuinely loud and clear, a rarity at this price point. Switch to audio-only mode and the battery stretches to 18 hours, effectively turning it into a portable speaker. The one gap is the absence of a built-in smart TV OS, though USB and HDMI ports make it easy to plug in a Chromecast or Fire Stick.

The L2s Home Cinema takes a different path. Without a battery, it goes bigger and brighter — 150-inch projection and 700 lumens, making it better suited for rooms with ambient light. It shares the same JBL speakers and the same HDMI solution for streaming. For anyone building a permanent home theater or happy to keep a projector in one room, the lack of portability is no real sacrifice. At $134.98, it saves over $100 compared to the T2 while actually exceeding it in key specs.

The choice between them is clean: the T2 for flexibility and freedom, the L2s for value and a bigger picture. Both represent a moment when projectors stopped being luxury items and started being practical ones — and the window to act on that moment is short.

If you've been waiting for projectors to become genuinely affordable, the moment has arrived. Two Yaber models just hit their lowest prices ever on Amazon, and the numbers are striking enough to warrant attention: the T2 Outdoor is down to $233.98, and the L2s Home Cinema has dropped to $134.98. These are limited-time offers, the kind that don't surface often and rarely stick around long.

The T2 Outdoor is the more versatile of the two, built for someone who wants to move the projector around. It has a built-in battery that runs for two and a half hours on a charge, which means you can set it up in your backyard, on a patio, or take it to a friend's house without hunting for an outlet. The projector can throw an image up to 120 inches across a wall or screen, displays in Full HD resolution, and produces 450 lumens of brightness—enough to look solid in medium to low light. What's genuinely surprising is the audio: it comes with 8W speakers powered by JBL, a rarity in budget projectors where sound is usually an afterthought. These speakers get loud and stay clear. If you switch the projector to audio-only mode, the battery stretches to 18 hours, essentially turning the device into a portable speaker system. The main limitation is the absence of a built-in smart TV operating system, but the projector has both USB and HDMI ports, so you can plug in a Chromecast, Fire Stick, or any other streaming device you prefer.

The L2s Home Cinema takes a different approach. It sacrifices the battery for a lower price and actually better specs in some areas. Without the portability constraint, it can project images up to 150 inches—significantly larger than the T2—and its brightness jumps to 700 lumens, making it more suitable for rooms with ambient light. It still has the same 8W JBL speakers and the same lack of integrated smart TV software, but again, the HDMI port solves that problem. The trade-off is simple: you need to keep it plugged in. For someone setting up a permanent home theater space or willing to leave it in one room, this isn't a real drawback. The price difference is substantial—you're saving over $100 by choosing the L2s, which at $134.98 represents remarkable value for a projector that can fill a wall with a sharp, bright image.

These deals represent a shift in what budget projectors can actually deliver. A few years ago, projectors were still luxury items, and even entry-level models cost significantly more. The Yaber line has compressed that gap. Neither projector has the features of high-end models, but both deliver functional home entertainment at prices that make them impulse-purchase territory for anyone who's been considering the format. The T2 is the choice if you want flexibility and portability; the L2s is the choice if you want to save money and don't mind staying tethered to an outlet. Either way, these are the lowest prices these models have ever reached, and Amazon's limited-time deal structure means the window is narrow. If you've been on the fence about projectors, the math just became much easier.

The only downside is that it does not have an integrated battery. This means you'll have to plug it in to use it.
— On the L2s Home Cinema's main limitation
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does a projector with no smart TV system matter at this price point? Doesn't that feel like a real limitation?

Model

It would be, except the HDMI port solves it completely. You plug in a Chromecast or Fire Stick—devices most people already own or can buy for thirty dollars—and suddenly you have full streaming capability. The projector becomes a blank canvas you customize.

Inventor

So the L2s is objectively better if you don't need the battery?

Model

Better in some ways, worse in others. You get a bigger image and brighter light, but you lose all portability. The T2 is the one you can actually take places. It depends entirely on how you plan to use it.

Inventor

The speaker situation seems almost too good to be true for the price.

Model

It genuinely surprised the reviewer. Projectors usually have tinny, unusable audio. These JBL speakers are actually pleasant, which means you're not immediately shopping for external speakers just to make the thing watchable.

Inventor

How long do these deals typically last?

Model

That's the catch. Amazon calls them limited-time, which usually means days, not weeks. If you're interested, waiting is the real risk here.

Inventor

Is there a reason to pick one over the other if budget is the only concern?

Model

The L2s. It's cheaper, brighter, and projects larger. You lose the battery, but if you're setting it up indoors, that's not a sacrifice—it's irrelevant.

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