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How scammers use Google Voice verification codes to steal your identity, money

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How scammers use Google Voice verification codes to steal your identity, money

Have you ever received a text message or a phone call from someone asking you to verify your identity by sending them a code? 

If you have, you may have been targeted by the Google Voice verification code scam. 

This is a sneaky and dangerous scam that allows fraudsters to hijack your phone number and use it to scam other people.

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Woman taking a photo to sell items (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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What is Google Voice?

Google Voice is a free service that lets you make and receive calls, texts and voicemails online. You can use it on your computer, smartphone or tablet. You can also link your Google Voice number to your existing phone number, so you can use both numbers interchangeably. 

Google Voice has many features that make it convenient and useful, such as, voicemail transcription, call forwarding, spam filtering, custom greetings, International calling and Google Assistant integration. However, Google Voice also has a verification process that requires you to enter a code that is sent to your phone number. This is where the scammers come in.

BEWARE OF THIS SNEAKY GOOGLE ATTACK THAT STEALS YOUR EXPIRED COOKIES

Google Voice Verification code (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

MORE: TV HOST ANDY COHEN SWINDLED IN COSTLY BANK SCAM: HOW TO AVOID BECOMING A VICTIM YOURSELF

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What is the Google Voice verification scam?

The Google Voice Verification Scam is a known scam, according to the FTC, but it’s not as widely known by the general public. Here’s how it works.

First, the scammer contacts you via text, email, or phone, pretending to be interested in buying something from you, hiring you, dating you, or any other plausible reason. They may use a fake name, photo, or profile to lure you in.

Second, the scammer asks you to verify your identity by sending them a code that they claim is from Google, Craigslist, Facebook, or any other platform. They may say that this is for security, verification, or confirmation purposes.

Next, the scammer actually initiates a Google Voice setup process using your phone number. They request a verification code from Google, which is then sent to your phone number via text or call.

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Then, the scammer asks you to forward the code to them, or tell them the code over the phone. In this case, if you forward or tell them the code, they’ll enter it and complete the Google Voice setup. This means that they now have access to your Google Voice account and number, and they can use it to make calls, send or read texts and receive voicemails online. Where this gets tricky is financial institutions often send similar codes to verify transactions, so if the scammer has possession of your Google Voice account, they can potentially approve transactions out of your account. 

Lastly, the scammer can also use your Google Voice number to scam other people, by pretending to be you or someone else. They can also access your personal information, such as your contacts, messages and voicemails, that are linked to your Google Voice account.

Example of Google Voice Verification code text (FTC)

MORE: HOW TO PROTECT YOURSELF FROM THE VENMO, ZELLE AND CASH APP SCAM THAT CAN WIPE OUT YOUR SAVINGS IN SECONDS

Isn’t this scam obvious?

You would think, right? But, even the most experienced sellers who have dealt with their fair share of complex scams are all new to those on Facebook Marketplace. The reason the Google Voice verification scam has been so effective is because these scammers use manipulation to accomplish their scam.

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By telling you that they need to check whether or not you are trustworthy, it triggers Facebook Marketplace sellers to demonstrate, “Of course I’m trustworthy, and I’m willing to do whatever I can to prove it, especially if this person is interested in buying from me.”

After all, the concept of an online buyer wanting to confirm the sellers — and the products they are buying are legitimate is common practice. But, in Facebook Marketplace, the lack of regulations makes it easy for both sellers and buyers to become victims of scams. Unfortunately, sellers tend not even to give this scam a second thought, until it’s too late.

What to do if you are a victim of the Google Voice scam

If you have fallen victim to the Google Voice verification code scam, don’t panic. There are some steps you can take to reclaim your number and protect your identity. Here is what you should do:

Change your Google account password and enable two-factor authentication on a separate device. It ensures that the scammer, who might have compromised your primary device, cannot interfere with these security measures.This will prevent the scammer from accessing your Google account and any other services that are linked to it, such as Gmail, YouTube, or Google Photos. You should also regularly check your account activity and review your security settings to see if there are any suspicious or unauthorized actions or devices.

Report the scam to the FTC and your local authorities. You can file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). You can also contact your local police department and file a report. Provide as much information as you can about the scam and the scammer, and keep a copy of the report for your records.

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Monitor your credit reports and bank statements. The scammer may have obtained your personal or financial information from your Google Voice account or other sources and may try to use it for identity theft or fraud. You should check your credit reports regularly and look for any errors or suspicious activities. You can get a free credit report from each of the three major credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian and TransUnion) once a year at www.annualcreditreport.com. You should also review your bank statements and alert your bank if you notice any unauthorized transactions or charges.

Use identity theft protection: Identity Theft protection companies can monitor personal information like your Home title, Social Security Number, phone number and email address and alert you if it is being used to open an account. They can also assist you in freezing your bank and credit card accounts to prevent further unauthorized use by criminals.

If you want a service that will walk you through every step of the reporting and recovery process, one of the best things you can do to protect yourself from this type of fraud is to subscribe to an identity theft service. See my tips and best picks on how to protect yourself from identity theft.

MORE: STOP THESE V-DAY SCAMS BEFORE THEY BREAK YOUR HEART AND YOUR BANK ACCOUNT

How to reclaim your Google Voice number if someone has stolen it

Google Voice works by linking to your actual phone number (though some people opt for a new number altogether). If you go to link your phone number and you see that it’s been claimed (and you have no recollection of ever linking it yourself), that means that someone has your number.

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Whether or not they got it because you were a victim of this Google Voice verification scam or maybe another way, they’ve now gotten your Google Voice number. Follow the steps from Google Help to reclaim your number and prevent these hackers from doing more harm.

3 ways to avoid the Google Voice verification code scam

The best way to avoid the Google Voice verification code scam is to be vigilant and cautious online. Here are some tips to help you spot and prevent the scam.

1. Never share your verification code with anyone. The verification code is meant for your eyes only. It is not a proof of identity, nor a confirmation of anything. If someone asks you to send them a code, or tell them a code over the phone, it is a red flag that they are trying to scam you. Google, Craigslist, Facebook or any other legitimate platform will never ask you for your verification code.

2. Do your research and trust your instincts. Before you engage with someone online, do some background checks and verify their identity and credibility. You can use search engines, social media, or reverse phone lookup tools to find out more about them. You can also ask them for references, reviews, or testimonials from previous customers or partners.

3. If something seems too good to be true, or too fishy to be real, it probably is. Trust your gut and walk away from any deal or offer that makes you feel uncomfortable or suspicious.

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MORE: HOW TO PROTECT YOURSELF FROM SOCIAL MEDIA SCAMMERS

Kurt’s key takeaways

The Google Voice verification code scam is a clever and dangerous scam that can cost you your phone number, your Google account and your identity. By being aware of how the scam works, and following the tips above, you can protect yourself and your loved ones from falling prey to this scam.

Have you ever been asked to provide a verification code when selling online? What happened? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.

For more of my tech tips & security alerts, subscribe to my free CyberGuy Report Newsletter by heading to Cyberguy.com/Newsletter.

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Copyright 2024 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.

Technology

The 7 biggest storylines from Summer Game Fest 2026

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The 7 biggest storylines from Summer Game Fest 2026

Both Sony and Microsoft used their showcases as a way to confirm they’re refocusing on tried-and-true strategies like exclusive games and single-player blockbusters. Meanwhile, every publisher in existence seemed to be avoiding going up against Grand Theft Auto VI on the release calendar, and there were some very welcome game announcements, particularly if you’re a fan of Final Fantasy or Persona.

If you couldn’t keep up with everything live, here are the most important storylines to catch up on.

After an ill-fated — and very expensive — foray into live-service games, it appears that Sony’s gaming division has a renewed focus on the single-player epics it’s known for. The company’s showcase was dominated by Insomniac’s Wolverine and the surprise announcement of God of War Laufey.

The next Grand Theft Auto wasn’t featured in any of the SGF showcases, but its presence was still felt. While lots of games got release dates, virtually none of them were during November, which just so happens to be when GTA VI launches. Instead, we have a very busy September and plenty of titles pushed into 2027.

Alan Wake studio Remedy hit a snag with the disastrous launch of the multiplayer shooter FBC: Firebreak. But based on our time with the upcoming sequel Control Resonant, it appears the developer is getting back to what it’s best at: mind-bending single-player action games.

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Indie duo Metanet is back with yet another return to its N series of platformers, but this time the focus is on multiplayer. And for fans of the hidden object game Hidden Folks, it’s also getting a sequel, which will launch a full decade after the original.

We knew it was coming, and now it’s official: The third and final installment of the FFVII remake trilogy is coming. It’s called Revelation, and it launches next spring across basically all platforms simultaneously. And yes, Queen’s Blood is coming back.

It’s been a long wait since Persona 5, and it’ll likely still be a while longer. Atlus confirmed Persona 6 exists, but the developer didn’t provide much in the way of detail, suggesting that the RPG is still fairly early in development.

After years of pushing on a multiplatform strategy, Microsoft is reversing course — at least a little bit. Its next big Xbox Game Studios title, Gears of War: E-Day, will be an Xbox console exclusive, whereas many expected it to come to the PS5, much like last year’s Gears remake. However, outside of Gears, many first-party titles from Xbox — like Fable and Halo — are still coming to PlayStation, so it’s unclear just how significant this change is.

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Is Apple Intelligence on your iPhone really secure?

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Is Apple Intelligence on your iPhone really secure?

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Apple has spent years telling us that privacy starts on the device. For many users, that message feels reassuring. Your messages, photos, emails and app data sit in your hand, protected by Face ID, passcodes and Apple’s security layers. Now, new research gives Apple’s on-device AI a reality check.

Researchers with RSAC Research found a way to manipulate Apple Intelligence using prompt injection, adversarial prompts and Unicode tricks. In 100 tests, they reported a 76% success rate against the on-device model used by Apple Intelligence. The researchers disclosed the findings to Apple on October 15, 2025. Apple later hardened protections in iOS 26.4 and macOS 26.4, according to RSAC.

Here’s the part that should get your attention: this kind of attack may not require someone to steal your iPhone, crack your passcode or break into Apple’s servers. It could start with carefully crafted text that tricks the AI into doing something you never asked it to do. If your phone’s AI can read, summarize, rewrite or help apps take action, attackers will try to trick it into doing things you never intended.

Apple Intelligence runs many AI tasks directly on your iPhone, but new research shows hidden prompts can still try to manipulate how it responds. (Getty Images)

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So what can you do? Start by understanding how this attack works, why Apple patched it and which settings can lower your risk.

APPLE TAPS GOOGLE GEMINI TO POWER APPLE INTELLIGENCE

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What researchers found in Apple Intelligence

RSAC researchers tested the on-device large language model built into Apple’s operating systems. That’s important because third-party apps can access Apple Intelligence through system tools and APIs.

Their attack used two main techniques. The first, called Neural Exec, used strange-looking prompts designed to confuse the model and push it toward a specific response. The second used Unicode’s right-to-left override feature. That feature can make text appear in a different direction, which may help hide malicious instructions from filters while still influencing the model.

NEW EMAIL SCAM USES HIDDEN CHARACTERS TO SLIP PAST FILTERS

In simple terms, the attack tried to sneak instructions past Apple’s AI safeguards. The prompts may look meaningless to you and me. Yet the model may still interpret them as commands. That is where the risk grows. Apple Intelligence can connect to apps and system features. So a manipulated response could do more than produce a strange answer. In a worst-case scenario, attackers could try to manipulate data or functions available to an Apple Intelligence-enabled app, especially if that app has access to sensitive information.

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Why Apple Intelligence prompt injection matters

Prompt injection is one of the biggest security problems facing AI tools. It happens when attackers hide instructions inside text that an AI model later reads. Think about a suspicious email, a strange document or a webpage with hidden text. You may see one thing. The AI model may process something else.

That creates a new kind of risk. An attacker may not need to break into your iPhone. They may only need to get a carefully crafted message, file or app input in front of the AI model.

OPENAI ADMITS AI BROWSERS FACE UNSOLVABLE PROMPT ATTACKS

If an app asks Apple Intelligence to summarize that content, rewrite it or act on it, the hidden prompt could try to steer the response. For you, that means AI safety now depends on more than strong passwords and software updates. It also depends on how well AI tools handle hostile instructions.

How Apple Intelligence works on your iPhone

Apple Intelligence uses a hybrid design. Some tasks run directly on your iPhone, iPad or Mac. More complex requests may move through Apple’s Private Cloud Compute system.

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Apple has framed that setup as a privacy-focused alternative to cloud-only AI tools. That approach makes sense. Keeping more processing on your device can reduce how much personal data leaves your phone.

However, local AI does not automatically mean risk-free AI. RSAC’s research shows that deeper system access can create a larger attack surface. The more Apple Intelligence connects with apps and system features, the more important the guardrails become.

A simple writing tool carries one level of risk. An AI tool that understands personal context and works across apps carries a higher one.

Why this Apple AI security flaw raises concerns

The concern here goes beyond strange chatbot responses. Apple Intelligence can connect directly to apps through system-level tools. That means manipulated responses could affect how an app behaves. Researchers said the model could be pushed into generating offensive or unintended responses. They also warned that attackers could potentially manipulate data and functionality available to an affected Apple Intelligence-enabled app.

THOUSANDS OF IPHONE APPS EXPOSE DATA INSIDE APPLE APP STORE

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RSAC estimated that between 100,000 and 1 million users may already be using apps with potential exposure. That estimate was based on apps Apple had identified as using the on-device LLM and RSAC’s rough calculations from App Store review data. That does not mean criminals are actively using this exact attack right now. RSAC said there was no public evidence of active exploitation when the research appeared. Still, the high success rate makes the findings hard to ignore.

What Apple has done about the iPhone AI risk

RSAC shared its findings with Apple before making the research public. According to RSAC, Apple hardened the affected systems against this attack in iOS 26.4 and macOS 26.4. Apple has not publicly detailed every change. That is common with security fixes, since companies often avoid giving attackers a roadmap.

The research appears to be a proof of concept, not a known active attack against everyday users. The most important takeaway for users is simple: keep your devices updated. Security patches only help if they reach your phone. If you delay updates for weeks or months, you may miss protections that close known gaps.

DON’T IGNORE APPLE’S URGENT SECURITY UPDATE

Ways to stay safe with Apple Intelligence

You do not need to stop using Apple Intelligence, but you should treat it like any powerful phone feature: keep it updated, limit what it can access, and stay careful with unfamiliar content.

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1) Update your iPhone, iPad and Mac

Start with the easiest protection. Make sure your device runs the latest software.

On iPhone: Settings > General > Software Update

On Mac: Click the Apple menu in the upper-left corner of your screen > System Settings > General > Software Update

Turn on automatic updates when possible. That helps your device receive security fixes as soon as Apple releases them.

Researchers say crafted text and Unicode tricks helped bypass Apple Intelligence safeguards in tests, raising concerns about apps that connect to the on-device AI model. (Kena Betancur/Bloomberg)

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2) Review your Apple Intelligence settings

If you do not use certain Apple Intelligence features, consider turning them off or limiting them. This can reduce how often AI tools interact with your apps, messages, summaries and personal content.

On iPhone: Settings > Apple Intelligence & Siri

From there, review which features are enabled. Turn off anything you do not need. 

3) Be selective with AI-powered apps

Do not give every app access to sensitive information just because it offers an AI feature. Before installing an app, check the developer, reviews and privacy details. Also, ask yourself whether the app really needs access to your messages, files, photos or contacts. If the answer feels unclear, skip it.

DON’T GET CAUGHT IN THE ‘APPLE ID SUSPENDED’ PHISHING SCAM

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4) Watch what you ask AI to summarize

Prompt injection can hide inside content that looks harmless. That could include emails, webpages, documents, notes or copied text. Be careful when asking AI to summarize unfamiliar content. A malicious file could contain hidden instructions meant for the AI rather than you.

5) Review app permissions

Take a few minutes to check which apps can access your private data.

On iPhone: Settings > Privacy & Security

Then review categories such as Photos, Contacts, Location Services, Microphone and Files. Remove access when an app no longer needs it.

6) Avoid pasting sensitive details into AI tools

Keep your most sensitive information out of AI prompts when possible. That includes Social Security numbers, banking details, tax documents, medical records and passwords. AI can help with many tasks. It should not become a dumping ground for your private life.

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7) Delete apps you no longer use

Unused apps can put your data at risk. If you downloaded an app months ago and forgot about it, remove it.

On iPhone: Touch and hold the app > Remove App > Delete App > Delete

The fewer apps you keep, the fewer ways your personal data can move around. 

8) Add strong antivirus software

Strong antivirus software adds another layer of protection against malicious links, scam websites, infected downloads and phishing attacks that may try to steal your personal information. While antivirus software will not directly stop every AI prompt injection risk, it can help block threats before they reach your device or trick you into handing over sensitive data.

The best antivirus software can also warn you about suspicious emails, dangerous attachments and fake websites. That extra protection becomes more important as scammers use AI to make attacks look more convincing. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android & iOS devices at Cyberguy.com

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9) Consider identity theft protection

Identity theft protection will not stop a prompt injection attack. Still, it can help if your personal information gets exposed or misused. A good identity theft protection service can monitor your personal data, alert you to suspicious activity and help you respond if someone tries to open accounts or use your identity. As AI tools become more integrated with apps and personal data, that extra monitoring can provide another layer of protection. See my tips and best picks on Best Identity Theft Protection at Cyberguy.com

10) Use stronger iPhone security settings

Keep Face ID or Touch ID enabled. Use a strong passcode instead of a simple four-digit code. Also, turn on Stolen Device Protection if your iPhone supports it.

On iPhone: Settings > Face ID & Passcode > Enter your passcode if prompted > Stolen Device Protection

This will not stop prompt injection by itself. However, it adds another layer if someone gets physical access to your phone.

Kurt’s key takeaways

Apple Intelligence still has a strong privacy story. Running more AI tasks on your iPhone and using Private Cloud Compute for tougher requests gives Apple a real advantage over many cloud-only AI tools. But this research is a reminder that private does not always mean untouchable. If an AI model can read prompts, summarize content and connect with apps, attackers will look for ways to bend it to their advantage. For you, the takeaway is simple. Keep your devices updated, be selective about AI-powered apps and think twice before letting AI process sensitive information. Apple can build strong walls around your data, but you still decide what you invite inside.

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Keeping your iPhone updated, limiting app access and being careful with unfamiliar content can help reduce your risk as AI becomes more deeply built into your device. (Sebastian Kahnert/Picture Alliance)

Would you trust an AI assistant more because it runs on your iPhone, or does deeper access to your personal data make you more cautious? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com

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JMGO’s N3 Ultimate projector is the new portable 4K champ

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JMGO’s N3 Ultimate projector is the new portable 4K champ

Sorry Anker: JMGO now makes my favorite flagship portable projector.

The N3 Ultimate is an excellent portable 4K projector that defeats moderate ambient light at severe placement angles and can rival more expensive home theater installations at night. After a few weeks of testing, I think the raw adaptability exhibited by the JMGO’s N3 Ultimate justifies its current $2,399 price ($500 off its $2,999 list).

Modern all-in-one projectors built around Google TV are already super accommodating when it comes to placement. Set one down on a living room table or campsite rock and it will begin searching for a screen or blank wall while avoiding obstacles to project a focused, color-corrected image that’s properly aligned. But these techniques typically resort to digital optimizations that degrade image brightness, resolution, and responsiveness. To avoid this, it’s always best to place a projector directly in front of the projection surface.

Optimizing image placement is fast, effective, and fun.

JMGO’s N3 Ultimate projector promises “lossless placement” by mounting it on a motorized gimbal that rotates horizontally and vertically. That, combined with optical zoom and generous lens shift, increases off-center placement flexibility without resorting to digital trickery. You can even drag the image Wiimote-style to the exact spot you want it using the included remote control. Handy!

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The N3 Ultimate doesn’t live up to all of its marketing hype, however. It’s pitched as a 5800 ISO lumen projector that I found to be unwatchable in its brightest mode for reasons I will explain later. In modes you can actually use, you’re getting about 4,600 ISO lumens, which drops to 3,000 ISO lumens if you want more accurate colors — that’s noticeably brighter than Anker’s Nebula X1 flagship 4K portable running in comparable modes.

Even though the N3 Ultimate misses the advertised ceiling, its class-leading brightness and impressive picture could make this a television replacement for some.

$2399

The Good

  • Unbeatable physical placement options that preserve image quality
  • Incredibly bright, daylight-ready output
  • Excellent out-of-the-box color reproduction
  • Very good sound for a portable
  • Snappy menu navigation and native Netflix support

The Bad

  • Horribly green and loud at max brightness
  • Automatic eye protection is wonky and slow to react
  • Clumsy menus required to swap into Bluetooth speaker mode
  • It’s portable, so where’s the handle?

The first spec I look at on portable projectors is the lumen rating. If the number is listed as anything other than ANSI or ISO, I just assume they are lying. JMGO isn’t exactly lying with its 5800 ISO lumen spec, but it’s not being completely transparent, either.

The N3 Ultimate only comes close to hitting that incredibly bright mark (I measured closer to 5,200 ISO lumens) when running in Dynamic mode, which skews the colors horribly green and causes the cooling fans to roar. The colors produced by this triple-laser RGB DLP projector are most accurate in Movie mode, but at almost half the advertised brightness.

Display Mode

Calculated ISO Lumens

Movie 3,066
Office 4,209
Vivid 4,624
Dynamic 5,216

Out of the box, I found the colors and tones produced by the N3 Ultimate’s factory tuning to be more true to life than many projectors in this class. Typically, I’d select Vivid during the day and then switch to Movie mode in darkened rooms. Sometimes I’d forget because the differences weren’t always obvious. The projector’s brightness allows its Dolby Vision support to meaningfully improve picture quality in both dark and not-so-dark rooms.

I tested the N3 Ultimate for an unhealthy number of hours on displays as large as 110 inches and as small as 32 inches; on painted walls, a glossy tabletop, a matte-white screen that increased the intensity, and a gray Ambient Light Rejecting (ALR) screen that boosted the contrast. It adapted admirably to each scenario with little intervention.

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Typically the projector ran whisper quiet — I had to strain to hear it. In warmer rooms and with adaptive brightness turned on, I could hear the fans kick up a notch to about 30dB from their usual 26dB, at a distance of one meter. At max brightness, the fans peaked at a very distracting 50dB.

Daytime watchable on this folded Ikea table when all those lumens are compressed into a 32-inch image.

Hank doesn’t like the new Ferrari, but he likes the 110-inch projected image on this ALR screen at midday.

This 90-inch image is watchable, but washed out when viewing it outside at dusk.

But soon, it looks great.

Optimizing image placement is a little tricky at first due to all the menu options and descriptions that aren’t exactly consumer friendly. Fortunately, there’s an optimization button right on the remote that removes the guesswork. Hold it down and you can drag the projected image around the room to center it wherever you want. Double-click the button and you’re presented with four menus that guide you through image-tuning options for Lossless Lens Shift, Gimbal Motion, Zoom, and Rotate. It’s very well done and makes the projector fast and easy to set up at new locations.

JMGO’s four optimization menus make fine-tuning image placement quick and easy.

JMGO’s four optimization menus make fine-tuning image placement quick and easy.

The sound is decent for a portable all-in-one of this size. It’s essentially an Anker Nebula X1 turned on its side, but lacking the optional satellite speakers that make Anker’s portable projector unbeatable for sound. Without those satellites, however, the Anker and JMGO sound roughly the same. The N3 Ultimate produced clear, detailed, room-filling sound with a respectable amount of bass. So, it’s a shame that JMGO doesn’t make it easy to quickly switch the projector into Bluetooth speaker mode from the shutdown screen like many portables — instead, you have to clumsily enable it through the settings menu.

The N3 Ultimate runs Netflix out of the box and menu navigation is snappy — two things you can’t take for granted with portable Google TV projectors. The one thing missing is an integrated handle, which makes this a two-handed portable. Fortunately, JMGO does ship the N3 Ultimate inside a reusable carrying case that came in handy when transporting it by car.

1/18

Dolby Vision HDR helps make scenes pop from Life in Color, with David Attenborough.
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I also found the projector’s automatic eye protection feature to be wonky. Even at the default sensitivity, it can be triggered for no reason. Worse, it’s slow to respond when eyeballs are actually at risk from the laser optics. And besides an on / off button, the N3 Ultimate lacks on-device controls — don’t lose the remote!

“Ultimate” is a dangerously high bar to set when naming your projector, but JMGO gets close to the mark. If audio quality is your absolute highest priority, Anker’s bulkier Nebula X1 speaker bundle remains a tempting alternative — though it will cost you significantly more cash. But if you are looking for class-leading brightness and unmatched physical placement flexibility from a 4K all-in-one projector, the JMGO N3 Ultimate at $2,399 is the way to go.

Listed Specs: JMGO N3 Ultimate

Display & Picture Quality
  • Light Source: MALC 5.0 Pure Triple Laser / RGB Laser
  • Resolution: 4K UHD
  • Brightness: 5800 ISO Lumens
  • Contrast Ratio: 20000:1
  • Color Gamut: 110% BT.2020
  • Color Accuracy: ΔE ≈ 0.7
  • HDR Formats: Dolby Vision, HDR10
  • Image Size: 40 to 300 inches
  • Display Technology: DLP

Optical & Placement System
  • Throw Ratio: 0.88–1.7:1
  • 3-in-1 Projection: Combines Optical Zoom, Lens Shift, and an AI Gimbal base
  • Projection Types: Front, Rear, Front Ceiling, Rear Ceiling

Smart Software & AI Features
  • Operating System: Google TV with native Netflix integration
  • Smart Features: Auto Screen Fitting, Auto Keystone, Auto Focus, Adaptive Brightness, and Wall Color Adaptation, Eye Protection
  • Custom Memory: AI Spatial Memory System to remember preferred walls, zoom levels, and shortcuts
  • Processor: MediaTek MT9679 chipset
  • Memory: 4GB RAM
  • Storage: 64GB ROM
  • Motion Tech: MEMC motion compensation
  • Speakers: Dual 12.5W stereo speakers (25W total output)
  • Sound Enhancement: Dolby Audio
  • Refresh Rate: Up to 240Hz
  • Input Lag: 1ms ultra-low latency
  • Extra Features: Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) support and specialized game modes
  • Wireless: Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2
  • Wired Ports: 2x HDMI 2.1 (with one port supporting eARC) and 1x USB 3.0
  • Dimensions: 308.3 x 229.85 x 274.13mm
  • Weight: 6.95kg
  • Power Consumption: up to 300W

Photography by Thomas Ricker / The Verge

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