Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player

Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player
Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player

Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player Price comparison

Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player Price History

Highest Price
€3.77 Amazon.de
June 28, 2025
Lowest Price
€3.35 Amazon.de
April 3, 2025
Current Price
€3.77 Amazon.de
June 28, 2025
Since April 3, 2025
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Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player Description

Experience High-Quality Entertainment with the Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player

Looking to elevate your home entertainment experience? The Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player is a cutting-edge device that brings cinematic visuals and stunning audio directly to your living room. With its advanced features and sleek design, this Blu-ray player is perfect for any movie enthusiast or casual viewer.

Key Features and Benefits of the Panasonic DMP-BDT210

  • Wi-Fi Connectivity: Stream content effortlessly from popular apps such as Netflix, Hulu, and YouTube. Enjoy the latest movies and shows without additional devices.
  • 3D Playback: Immerse yourself in stunning 3D visuals for a truly cinematic experience. The DMP-BDT210 makes every movie night feel like a trip to the theater.
  • High-Definition Video: Enjoy 1080p full HD video quality that brings out the best in your favorite films. Experience vivid colors and sharp details like never before.
  • Energy Efficient: This Blu-ray player meets ENERGY STAR standards, ensuring you save on energy bills while enjoying premium entertainment.
  • Compact Design: Measuring just 17 x 7.3 x 1.4 inches and weighing 3.5 pounds, this player fits seamlessly into your entertainment setup.

Price Comparison Across Different Suppliers

The Panasonic DMP-BDT210 stands out in terms of value for money. Prices may vary by retailer, but you can typically find this exceptional Blu-ray player ranging from $99 to $149. Check our price comparison section for the latest deals and offers from various suppliers.

6-Month Price History Trends

In analyzing the 6-month price history, the DMP-BDT210 has shown a stable price range with minor fluctuations. The lowest observed price was around $95, while the highest peaked at $145. This consistent pricing trend suggests that while there may be occasional sales, the value remains solid throughout the year.

What Customers Are Saying: Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Reviews

Customer reviews overwhelmingly praise the Panasonic DMP-BDT210 for its exceptional quality and ease of use. Users appreciate the seamless streaming capabilities and the impressive picture quality, especially for 3D content. Many have noted the compact size, which makes it a great fit for smaller spaces.

However, some users have pointed out a few drawbacks. A few have experienced minor connectivity issues, primarily related to Wi-Fi stability in certain locations. Additionally, some reviews mention that while the initial setup is straightforward, the remote control can be a bit cumbersome to navigate.

Dive Deeper: Unboxing & Review Videos

Curious about the Panasonic DMP-BDT210? Check out various unboxing and review videos available on YouTube. These videos provide insights into its features and functions, helping you see the player in action. They also offer tips and tricks on maximizing your experience with this Blu-ray player.

Why Choose the Panasonic DMP-BDT210?

Investing in the Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player means choosing a device that’s not just powerful but also versatile. Whether you’re binge-watching your favorite series, enjoying a family movie night, or hosting friends for a gaming session, this Blu-ray player ticks all the boxes. Its combination of modern streaming capabilities and traditional Blu-ray playback sets it apart in today’s entertainment landscape.

With regard to SEO, if you’re searching for Panasonic DMP-BDT210 price or Panasonic DMP-BDT210 reviews, you’ll find numerous positive testimonials along with a competitive price range that proves to be attractive for both audiophiles and casual viewers alike.

In conclusion, the Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player stands out as a leading choice for anyone looking to enhance their viewing experience. With its robust feature set, compact design, and positive reception from users, it’s a smart investment for your entertainment needs.

Compare prices now! Get the best deals on the Panasonic DMP-BDT210 and enjoy endless hours of high-quality entertainment in your home!

Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player Specification

Specification: Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player

Brand Name

Panasonic

Item Weight (pounds)

3.5

Product Dimensions

17 x 7.3 x 1.4 inches

Item model number

DMP-BDT210

Batteries

2 AA batteries required.

Is Discontinued By Manufacturer

No

Color Name

black

Specification Met

energy_star

Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player Reviews (2)

2 reviews for Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray Player

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  1. WildBill

    To give a frame of reference, I replaced a Panasonic BD35 with this Panasonic DMP-BDT210 it is hooked to a Sony HD AV 7.1 receiver and to a Panasonic 50″ Plasma TV, and I have a LinkSys Wireless Router (802.11n).

    It arrived today and I opened the box at about 6PM, ready for what I expected was going to a long night, just seems to usually work out that way these days, figured it would be issues with getting it on the network, so I started in.

    Nothing tricky for my hook-up, just one HDMI connection to the receiver and I used the one that was there from the BD35, and the power cord, that was it for wires.

    Put the batts (supplied) in the remote and turned it on, pops up quickly to an Easy Set-Up menu that you can get through in a few seconds and start playing Blu-ray DVD’s. I wanted to hook it to the network and I always like to look around at the options, so I opted to go to the other set-up menu.

    The Easy Set-up takes you to the option to set up a network connection, if you are not going to use the network features you can just pick no and you are ready to watch a Blu-ray movie. I opted to set-up the network and this is what I thought was going to be the hard part, it asked, wired or wireless, I picked wireless, it found my network in about 15 seconds and put the name on the screen, I picked it and it knew it was a secure/encrypted network connection so it asked for the password, and put up a keyboard to put it in.

    Once I gave it the password it started trying to connect to the network, a screen pops up with a number of pass/fail tests it is running, that took another 15 seconds to pass them all.

    The rest of set-up can be skipped for the most part depending on your connection to the TV or in my case the player to the receiver and receiver to the TV through HDMI connections, so it knew the capabilities of the TV and set everything right.

    If you want to more personalize it or need to set the screen size (standard/wide) then Set-Up offers that an a number of other options, like parental control, the display brightness, a number of audio options and 3D and 2D video options, all in all very nice set of options and again, most never need be messed with if you don’t want to, it attempts to optimize itself. (Also, no matter how bad you mess it it, you can just tell it to go back to factory settings and do it again)

    After spending about 5 minutes in set-up doing the network and looking around I had to pop in a disc and see how it looked and sounded. I did not really expect a noticable difference from my old one in picture and sound, and perhaps it is just percerption, but both seemed better to me.

    However what you notice first is the speed it loads the disc, it is very fast. The BD35 was slow, so slow I would rather watch a bad movie than change discs, I had put in Tron 3D as the first test, killer, video and audio, and effects. Next, I put in Tron in 2D and tried the 2D to 3D, interesting and effective, looked pretty good but I am not a big 3D fan. There are also settings the change the 3D effects.

    Next, I went to 2D and again the audio and video were just outstanding, not that the old one was bad at all, this was just better, enough to notice. So for picture and sound it is 5 stars all the way for the price.

    The menu navigation is very clean and easy to follow while in the Panasonic menus, and very fast, navigating the disc is also fast, more that quick enough to make those options worth it. So overall navigation and easy of use I have to also give a 5.

    Now for something I had not tried before on my TV other than Pay-Per-View via cable, I hit the VeraCast and there was YouTube, Amazon, NetFlix, VuDu, and a bunch of others. I tried out Amazon first and watched a free show, no issues at all. It played perfectly, no picture snags, stops, buffering, audio dropouts, it played as well as from the cable box. Same for NetFlix, the stuff all played fine.

    I did notice sluggish menus while on the Internet Movie sites, it was clear that it was not the unit but the sites, and even then by sluggish I mean a few seconds delay on some selections, not like my old unit were somethings could take a few minutes.

    So 5 stars on the internet movie, tv, and information features.

    I guess no review would be complete with a unit with the ability to wave your hand over the top of the player to open and close the drawer, so here is its honorable mention, it works.

    Well my prediction of spending half the night (3 hours) was correct, but it was not in getting it to work, it was watching YouTube and Amazon video’s, and parts of a number of movies. A very enjoyable evening.

    Overall I give this a solid 5, there was nothing I could find to knock it down, it was easy to set up, easy to use, and outstanding performance and features.

    Panasonic DMP-BDT210 Integrated-Wi-Fi 3D Blu-ray DVD Player

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  2. Chris Boylan

    [Note: some of this review is repeated from my review of the Panasonic DMP-BDT310 Blu-ray 3D Player, as these two players are effectively identical other than the BDT310’s second HDMI output]

    The DMP-BDT210 is second from the top in Panasonic 2011 Blu-ray player line-up, offering excellent audio and video performance, fast boot up and disc loading times and a nice selection of internet streaming features including VUDU, Netflix, Pandora, YouTube and Skype. But disappointingly, while adding support for MKV file playback, Panasonic dropped support for the popular Divx audio/video codec this year so if you want to use this as a home media playback hub, you may be disappointed. Other than that, the BDT210 is a solid player with some unique features sure to satisfy both the A/V hobbyists and more casual movie lovers out there.

    *Faster, Pussycat*

    Panasonic has taken some heat in prior years for its slow disc-loading and ugly menus. Apparently they’ve taken these complaints to heart as the BDT210 offers big improvements in both areas. With the Quick Start feature enabled (which uses a bit more power in standby mode), the DMP-BDT210 boots up in about a second, or 16 seconds with Quick Start turned off. Once it’s on, the player loads a standard DVD loads to the studio logo in about 17 seconds, a Blu-ray Disc in about 15 seconds and a BD-Java Blu-ray Disc in an impressive 28 seconds. Sure, you can still find exceptions, such as “Inglourious Basterds” which takes about a minute and a half to load up all of its extensive BD-Live content, but for the most part you won’t even notice the loading times, and this is more than we can say for many other players.

    In terms of the menu navigation, the 2011 players have a new GUI — a graphically oriented splash screen with icons that represent various media or activities: network, video, audio, etc. It’s a big plus over the previous models’ menus, giving equal importance to content whether it is from a streaming source, a home network, a silver disc or a connected USB drive. If you click on the set-up icon, you’ll get the same old familiar-looking text based menu from earlier players, but this is not a place you’ll really need to spend much time. The set-up wizard sets up most of the essentials in just a few screens on initial start-up.

    The BDT210 includes built-in WiFi as well as a network port so you can connect to your home network (and from there to the internet) with or without a network cable. This worked fine for us in the “auto” mode, connecting to a Cisco/Linksys dual band wireless-n router. The speed over WiFi was ample enough to stream HD content from Netflix and even HDX 1080p movies from VUDU. It also works well with Skype to receive or send video calls to other Skype users anywhere in the world. If you call another Panasonic TV or Blu-ray player owner with Skype, you can even see them (and they can see you) in high definition 720p resolution. So please remember to put on pants. The Skype video voice mail is a nice feature as it allows callers to leave a video message if you’re unavailable to take a call (or forgot to put on pants). This feature, as well as BD-Live, require an SD card of at least 1 GB be inserted into the player, but we’d recommend at least 4GB so you have enough storage for messages and BD-Live content.

    We did notice a couple of issues with the streaming, specifically in Netflix, if the connection between you and the Skype servers varies, you may see occasional black frames in the image as the player adjusts itself to optimize the audio and video quality. This didn’t happen often enough to be annoying, but it is worth mentioning. Also, though the player supports Blu-ray 3D Discs, and includes 2D to 3D conversion as an option for 2D content, it does not support 3D movies on the VUDU service. You’ll see “No results found” in the 3D collection on VUDU. At the present time, Samsung is one of the few vendors to support VUDU 3D playback in their Blu-ray players and TVs. We have contacted Panasonic about this and they are unsure whether this can be added in a firmware upgrade but they are looking into it.

    *By All Means, Cross the Streams!*

    If you do enjoy watching 2D content (movies or TV shows) via streaming sources such as Netflix, Amazon, YouTube and VUDU, the BDT210 is an excellent choice. Panasonic made some enhancements to its Uniphier video processor in 2011 so that the full suite of video scaling and chroma upconversion processing is applied to streaming sources, in addition to disc playback. Earlier Panasonic Blu-ray players only applied a limited amount of video processing to streaming sources. This means streaming sources look better than ever, and better than they do on most other vendor’s Blu-ray players or streaming set-top boxes. And also, the chroma bug we observed on SD streaming sources in Panasonic’s 2010 model Blu-ray 3D players(DMP-BDT100 and DMP-BDT350) has been banished in this year’s players. Standard def streaming sources are much cleaner with clear edges around colored borders.

    Panasonic also enhanced the chroma conversion processor this year so your collection of existing DVDs will be presented with good detail and nicely saturated colors, and with the option of 24p playback (24 frames/second) which is great for movie purists. It’s not going to fool you into thinking your old DVDs are Blu-ray Discs, but it does the best it can with standard definition sources. Blu-ray and Blu-ray 3D playback are excellent, as they are on most modern Blu-ray 3D players. Not much to report here but we noticed no audio or video glitches on Blu-ray playback. “Avatar” in particular looks sweet in 3D with the Blu-ray 3D disc you’ll get free via the mail-in rebate on this player.

    We ran the player through the standard set of video test patterns and clips on the HQV Benchmark and Spears & Munsil discs and found that it passed all of the tests for diagonal filtering, de-interlacing, chroma upconversion and cadence detection, with the only noticeable artifacts occurring in the less common film/video cadences which aren’t that widely used on Blu-ray or DVD. All in all, the DVD upconversion quality is excellent and comparable to much more expensive players.

    *One Step Forward…*

    Panasonic added MKV file format support to this year’s players (yay!) but they took away support for the Divx and Xvid codecs (boo!). So if you have a big collection of videos in Divx format, or subscribe to one of the online movie download services that delivers Divx-encoded content (Like Warner Brothers’ WBShop web site), then this player is probably not for you. Panasonic says they eliminated Divx support in order to cut costs associated with the licensing fees. I hope they reconsider this for next year’s players as it was nice to be able to play back Divx and Xvid-encoded videos on the earlier players via a connected USB drive.

    In terms of usability and connectivity, the DMP-BDT310 lacks component video outputs but it offers a composite video, fiberoptic digital audio and stereo anlog audio outputs for compatibility with non-HDMI TVs and home theater systems. But you’ll want to use the HDMI jack if you can as this is the only way to do high definition output and the only way to pass the 3D signal from Blu-ray 3D Discs. If you happen to own an A/V receiver with HDMI 1.3 switching which lacks 3D passthrough support, then check out the otherwise identical DMP-BDT310 which adds a second HDMI output to the player for compatibility with older receivers.

    In the remote department, the remote control on the 2011 players is smaller than the 2010 models, but maintains a pretty comfortable button layout and keeps all the essential controls in easy reach. Panasonic also introduced a free iPad/iPhone app to control the player this year, available for download from Apple’s App Store to your iPhone, iPod Touch or iPad. In addition to supporting full playback controls and navigation, the remote app also includes an exact visual duplicate of the factory remote as an image in the app, so if you lose your remote, you won’t lose any of the functionality. Unfortunately they missed an opportunity here to include any kind of keyboard. Without that, setting up your streaming accounts (Pandora, Netflix, VUDU, etc.) is a painstaking process of clicking and tapping away on the numeric keypad or moving the cursor around on a virtual keyboard with the left and right arrow buttons. The player also offers a motion-activated eject function which opens the disc tray with a wave of the hand. This may be fun at parties but I found it mostly useless so I disabled it early in the testing.

    Turn Ons:

    * Nicely improved GUI
    * Quick to boot and load discs
    * Excellent audio and video performance on discs and streaming sources
    * Good selection of streaming providers and apps
    * Built-in WiFi
    * iPod control

    Turn Offs:

    * Lacks Divx/XVid support
    * No built-in storage for BD-Live and Skype video voice mail (requires SD card)
    * iPhone app lacks a keyboard
    * VUDU implementation does not support 3D (yet)
    * Requires specific Panasonic or Freetalk camera for Skype (more expensive than most webcams)

    The Bottom Line: if you’re looking for a fast, high performance Blu-ray player with great DVD upconversion, excellent Blu-ray and Blu-ray 3D performance and a nice selection of streaming features, Panasonic’s DMP-BDT210 makes a great choice. But if Divx/XVid video file playback is important to you, you’ll need to look elsewhere.

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