Blu-ray and HD DVD are certainly shaking up the way we watch movies, but not everyone has the cash (or the energy) to buy all their favourite films again on one of these new HD formats.

So if you're going to be stuck with DVDs for a while, you might as well pick up a player that makes them look their very best - and that's where the Denon DVD-2930 comes in.

It's an upscaling DVD player, which means it can take the 576-lines of video stored on a DVD disc and boost them up to 720 or 1080 lines. But whereas the majority of upscaling DVD players only upscale to 720p or 1080i, the DVD-2930 goes one better and offers 1080p output, the same resolution offered by most Blu-ray and HD DVD decks.

So if you've got a 'full HD' TV - in other words, one that boasts a resolution of 1,920 x 1,080 pixels - then this player's pictures can be 'mapped' directly onto the screen pixel for pixel, without needing to be upscaled or deinterlaced by the TV. The result? DVD pictures look better than ever.

Size of a pig!

The deck's other big selling point is its immaculate build quality. Granted, it's a bit porky when it's compared with the swarms of wafer-thin machines on the market, but this is a deck that puts quality over cosmetics.

It boasts an aluminium front panel and a three-layer bottom chassis to reduce any meddlesome vibration, and it's fitted with high-grade video and audio components to keep the signal ship-shape. Everything about this piece of kit oozes quality, from its reassuringly heavy 7.6kg weight down to the smooth disc tray mechanism.

The feature list reads like an A-Z of home cinema jargon. It plays both DVD-Audio and SACD, which makes it a top choice for audiophiles, while Web downloaders will be happy with DivX playback. It's also compatible with MP3, WMA and JPEG files plus a decent array of recordable disc types.

You're spoilt for choice when hooking this up to your display. HD devotees should head straight to the HDMI output (which is version 1.1, socket-spotters) but there's also a set of progressive-scan component video outputs and a single RGB-capable Scart.

On the audio side, you'll find six-channel analogue outputs for DVD-A and SACD playback, or binary buffs can use the Denon Link socket, which carries the multichannel signal digitally to a Denon receiver.