5. Floorstanding and Soundbar Speakers
The types of speakers being incorporated into media rooms is changing, too. Berman sees a trend in people using floorstanding and bookshelf speakers rather than in-wall speakers. The media room is still a special destination room, so users want a good experience. In-wall speakers are great if you want to hide all of the equipment, but floorstanding and surface-mounted on-wall speakers produce the clearest audio. Stereo East usually recommends a quality digital-to-audio converter (DAC) with each audio system to improve the fidelity of digital music files.

Paradigm Studio 60 tower speaker
Atlantic Technology’s Peter Tribeman notes a strong move toward soundbars, as well. People may think that soundbars are more about looks than sound, but Tribeman says today’s best soundbars approach the quality of full-range speakers and can be easier to integrate into the home. Entry-level and midrange home theater-in-a-box systems are giving way to soundbar/subwoofer systems because they offer an easy way to fill a room with audio. Built-in audio processing, Bluetooth, wireless subwoofers and one-remote operation are making those systems attractive options for people looking to upgrade from poor-sounding TV speakers.

Grant -
I have to wonder if the multi-screen/ Multi-use rooms are a direct reaction to the trend of clients desire to have content directed to the second screens -(i.e. tablets such as iPads) over a main common screen.
I have my doubts that the trend toward small in the residential world is stoppable.
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@Tuckertues, Most of the multi-screen rooms I’ve seen are for extreme sports fans, and I believe you’re right, it’s a variation of the “second screen” phenomenon brought on by smartphones, laptops and tablets. However, when you ask a person if they want to watch two games on screens the size of a notepad or on big TVs, the only decision is “how big?”