
"Most gaming setups lean on either a soundbar under the monitor or a headset clamped to your head. Soundbars are convenient but flatten the sense of space, especially when games and films are mixed for surround and height. Headsets can isolate better, but they get warm after a few hours and cut you off from the room entirely. Thunder Duo Max tries to bring full Dolby Atmos to a desk or living room without turning the space into a speaker warehouse."
"Thunder Duo Max is the top configuration in a modular series, built around a pair of compact bookshelf speakers that handle the front channels and height effects. The system is a true 5.1.2-channel Dolby Atmos rig, not a virtual surround bar, and the bookshelf format unlocks larger drivers, fuller bass, and a flexible layout that can expand or tighten the soundstage depending on how you arrange it, making it comfortable on a desk or beside a TV."
"The dual upward-firing Sky Channels built into each speaker send sound toward the ceiling to create a real overhead layer. That matters in games where helicopters, rain, or footsteps above you become easier to place, and it adds a vertical dimension to films and music that most desktop setups ignore. This is certified Dolby Atmos performance, with decoding handled by one of the system's two dedicated DSPs, so height effects come from actual audio processing rather than software tricks."
Thunder Duo Max is a modular top-tier configuration centered on compact bookshelf speakers that provide front channels and genuine height effects. The system is a true 5.1.2 Dolby Atmos rig with dedicated DSP decoding, not a virtual surround bar, enabling accurate overhead imaging via upward-firing Sky Channels. The bookshelf format allows larger drivers and fuller bass while offering a flexible layout suitable for desks or beside TVs. Rear channels are provided by a wireless satellite neck speaker, solving placement issues in small rooms, and low end is anchored by a wireless sub for impactful bass.
Read at Yanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
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