At 12.4 ounces, it makes even my Sony WH-atev3rs feel light-and they’re already on the bulky side. If you do, you’re going to have to overlook its shortcomings for more general use. At $400 retail, the Mobius is difficult to recommend unless you absolutely must have the most high-quality drivers available in a gaming headset. While independently ranging from excellent to merely passable, everything combined makes the Mobius a cumbersome beast of a headset, difficult to effectively use for either intense gaming sessions or casual audio. Audeze says that its unique system allows for more accurate sound localization.īut I think this headset is a victim of a kitchen sink approach. It also has something I haven’t seen before, at least in a review unit: positional head tracking, a la a dedicated VR headset. It also has just so, so many other features you’d expect from a high-end gaming headset: Bluetooth wireless, a detachable mic boom, and 7.1 surround sound, virtualized through software. The Mobius brings planar magnetic drivers, the tip-top of audiophile quality, to a gaming-focused wireless headset. Unfortunately, the whole is less than the sum of its parts. ![]() ![]() ![]() Audeze is trying to have its cake and eat it too with the Mobius, which packs in pretty much every possible feature that both gamers and audiophiles could want. Headsets for your PC generally come in two flavors: gaming-specific designs and those that focus on audio quality.
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