I have yet to get around to an argon mk3, t60rps, or dekoni blue. Been wanting to audition them need to find a way how in the event that I don’t like them.
The mic on most “gaming” headsets is just horrible garbage. Once you experience something like a ModMic, gaming headsets just aren’t even a “thing” anymore. ¯_(ツ)_/¯
However, I have heard the HyperX sets based off the Takstar pro 80s are alright.
My company has found out differently. If that is the case then change your software and ADC.
I’m going to say it, gaming with the Ether CX is pretty awesome. Imaging is damn good, all the dynamics I want in music that I complain aren’t enough… don’t distract while gaming while making you completely aware of your environment. I can attest they take to a mod mic quite well. Only issue with the Ether is that they are picky on amps and the break in time is damn near 300 hours with surprising amounts of change.
Some could say that the price is also a issue to get everything right. Pretty big in my books.
Since we still are in the subject of gaming headphones, they kinda are not by default.
I’ve used them for destiny and the imaging was strange but exceedingly helpful. I still really enjoy my pc37x but in the context of gaming… Yeah, they can do it. However Elegia’s seem to be a better option if looking/comparing to the Ether CX.
Just sharing some experience hoping someday someone will find value in it.
Just wondering… how loud do people play with them and what is they mic’s sensitivity?
Have played with Game Ones for sometime now and i hear what i need to hear. None have said that they hear game sounds back…
I have tweaked mic and sound settings little but still… should not be issue?
It’s not an issue. The pc37x has been a goto by people at work using the worst conference software and I have to say… I never hear myself on someone else’s pc37x driven to sane volumes. If people can hear themselves through the microphone I’d be rather shocked.
Hmm, well to be fair experiences may vary this is just my experience. It’s fixable but I had the headphones sound feeding through the microphone on all three headphones more so on the hypers by a longshot, this was fixed by the later model of cloud 2 and alphas which no longer exhibit this problem and my second pair of pc37x while still sometimes has this issue upon changing my pc settings around and sensitivity settings no longer had this problem but game ones I could not fix. I keep sound levels around 40% sometimes 50% depending on what I am doing and how quiet things are… a little higher in horror games cuz ya know… immersion and spookyness lol
I have never bothered to actually sit down with the ethers but I have heard great things… I personally own the aeon open x and it is one of my definite favorites as it stays on my shelf next to my fidelio x2 hr and nighthawk carbons. I was curious how this would pair in comparison to the 177x go I was considering cause I want a really strong closed back for immersion gaming and music and isolation. I definitely need to audition it at some point.
I personally am disappointed by my ethers but for gaming headphones they can work well with odd but helpful imaging. Imagine is great in the center and far out to the sides, dead spot on the sides out to the extremes which is still in view.
Overall, knowing what I know now the Aeon’s I believe are a better headphone for nearly everything. The comfort of the Ether CX and how light weight do make them ideal for long conference calls and long listening sessions. The power requirements are just odd and they need headroom plus a touch of whatever the RNHP sound signature sauce has to offer to open up.
100% agree. Won my first ever warzone round with those headphones and had no issue hearing enemies exact location
How did you get a Panda so early? First production batch is supposed to ship in June.
Pre-production model comfort was kinda so-so (I attended Listening Day @ Drop HQ), and apparently they’ve added some padding.
wasnt first batch model may like when it comes out more.
Good to know. I’ve not tried mine for gaming, but they are extremely comfortable–would work well for long sessions.
That’s exactly what I used mine for. Tried them for music, and they were passable, but I quickly moved on to “real” headphones on a dedicated rig for work, and leave the PC37X connected to my laptop for work meetings.
Same; mine don’t get a lot of rotation time. I prefer Elegia, Stellia and occasionally Eikon for office listening, where I need a closed-back. Will have to give them a run on gaming. I also haven’t spent any time playing with pads and damping materials to see if I can tune them into something I like better. Probably worth doing at some point, but I’ve had no shortage of other things to listen to.
Just know that more you mess with the tuning the more imaging suffers on those headphones.
Probably stick to my aeons for most well rounded applications less I find a better alternative… not to many good wide warm sounding headphones so far from my experience.