REVIEW

[REVIEW] Mutant HD1265

As an Enigma2 specialist, I view the Mutant HD1265 as the refined successor to the legendary HD1200. Its name is a direct nod to its primary upgrade: the addition of H.265 (HEVC) hardware decoding. While it remains a Full HD (1080p) receiver, this codec support makes it a “survivalist” box for the modern era of bandwidth-efficient broadcasting.

Here is the expert technical review of the Mutant HD1265.


## Technical Specifications: The HEVC Evolution

The HD1265 moves away from older MIPS architectures to a more efficient Broadcom SoC designed specifically for the transition to H.265.

  • CPU: Broadcom BCM73625 Dual-Core (750MHz / 2000 DMIPS)

  • RAM: 512MB DDR3

  • Flash: 256MB NAND

  • Tuner: 1x Fixed DVB-S2 (Satellite)

  • Video Support: H.265/HEVC (up to 1080p60)

  • Networking: 10/100 Ethernet


## Expert Breakdown: The Modern Legacy Box

### 1. The H.265 Bridge

The “1265” is effectively a bridge between the old MIPS standard and the new 4K ARM world.

  • Expert Insight: Many satellite providers and IPTV streams have shifted to H.265 for their standard HD channels to save transponder space. Older boxes like the HD1200 or HD500C will simply show a black screen on these channels. The HD1265 handles these flawlessly, making it the perfect budget-friendly replacement for legacy setups that don’t yet need 4K.

### 2. Broadcom Stability

Unlike many budget-tier “shanzhai” boxes using cheaper HiSilicon or ALi chips, the HD1265 sticks with Broadcom. This ensures:

  • Driver Maturity: You won’t see the “tuner lock” bugs or audio-sync issues common in lower-end SoCs.

  • Fast Zapping: Despite the modest clock speed, the BCM73625 is highly optimized for channel switching. On images like OpenPLi, zapping is under 1 second.

### 3. The “Flash” Challenge

With only 256MB of NAND Flash, this box requires an expert touch to keep it running smoothly in 2026.

  • Pro Tip: Do not attempt to install heavy “Kodi-lite” plugins or high-resolution weather skins. Stick to the Default Skin or a lightweight 720p skin.

  • Essential Setup: Always initialize a high-speed USB stick and use the FlashExpander plugin immediately after flashing to move your /usr directory to the USB. This is the only way to ensure enough room for EPG data and picons.


## Performance Verdict

Category Rating Expert Notes
Boot Time 6/10 Cold boot is approx. 55-65 seconds.
Zapping Speed 8/10 Snappy and responsive for satellite surfing.
IPTV Support 7/10 Handles H.265 streams up to 1080p; no 4K support.
Build Quality 7/10 Compact, plastic chassis; runs cool.

## Final Verdict

The Mutant HD1265 is the “Practical Professional’s” choice for a secondary room or a budget-conscious satellite feed. It isn’t a 4K powerhouse like the HD51, nor a multi-tuner beast like the HD2400.

  • Buy it if: You need a reliable, low-cost satellite box that can handle the new H.265/HEVC broadcast standards on a 1080p TV.

  • Skip it if: You are looking for a primary living room media center, want 4K resolution, or plan on running a dozen complex Enigma2 plugins simultaneously.

In the 2026 landscape, the HD1265 stands as one of the last high-quality, entry-level Broadcom boxes still receiving active image updates from teams like OpenATV.


### Comparison: HD1200 vs HD1265

Feature HD1200 (Legacy) HD1265 (Modernized)
Codec H.264 (AVC) only H.265 (HEVC) + H.264
CPU BCM7362 BCM73625
HEVC 1080p No (Black Screen) Yes (Full Support)