You Want an Audiophile Gaming Headset, but Just Not This One
Briefly

You Want an Audiophile Gaming Headset, but Just Not This One
"Then there are even more expensive options, like SteelSeries' Arctis Nova Elite, which costs more than the aforementioned console at $600, though it does come with a separate hub. I'm not saying those gaming headsets don't sound goodI tried the Inzone H9 II for myself and was impressedbut if you're spending a several-hundred-dollar sum on a gaming headset (just a headset for Pete's sake), it better be game-changing."
"That being said, it's a bar that can be met, as evidenced by Sony's Inzone H9 II. Still, rising to the level of game-changing is no easy task, which is why I went into testing VZR's Model One MKII Audiophile gaming headset with a raised eyebrow. With a $360 price tag, can the Model One MKII really deliver the goods at a level that makes the premium feel justified? The answer is complicated."
VZR markets the Model One MKII as an audiophile gaming headset that uses CrossWave technology to mimic how sound naturally enters the ears. Precise acoustic tuning aims to produce natural spatial audio useful for first-person shooters, emphasizing footfalls and environmental cues. The headset feels sturdy and comfortable and can sound very good when configured correctly. The Model One MKII lacks Bluetooth, a 2.4GHz dongle, and active noise cancellation, and it performs poorly when connected through a Bluetooth controller. The $360 price positions it in the premium range, and overall value is mixed.
Read at gizmodo.com
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]