The enclosed design ensures that no sound leaks out and wakes my other half. The sound quality is in line with what I would expect from Sennheiser; Suitably excellent. Suffice to say that the PC will satisfy all but the discerning audiophile. What I do lament for, however, is a detachable cable. In a gaming headset an easily detachable cable would allow for any one of several desired lengths to be fitted and additionally allow for that most vulnerable of components to be easily replaced should it get decimated by the hungry caster wheels of an office chair.
Please could somebody standardize a secure connection for detachable headphone cables already? The slot-into-the-back PXC solution is a good point of reference, start there and make it generic!
Having looked reasonably recently at a wealth of gaming headsets I can say with some reasonable confidence that the Sennheiser PC is probably the best choice on the market at the moment. The PC had the punch and sound signature for gaming, but is relatively cheap feeling with an inflexible design while PC had respectable design, but lacked the kick needed for gaming.
Both were still good choices, but a good headset was so close I could taste it — and then I saw the PC s. The look is sleek, simple and refined, but bold and glossy. The ear pads are soft and comfortable for hours of play, though they can get a little warm.
The headband is adjustable, with extra padding, and the single cord design keeps the wire clutter gremlins at bay. On the left earpiece is the swivel down directional, noise cancelling microphone, which can be muted using the inline remote, which also controls volume. The single cord terminates at the standard green headphone and pink microphone 3.
Image Courtesy of Sennheiser. Unlike some past Sennheiser gaming headsets, the PC does not come with a USB adapter, which is important for several reasons. First, most gamers have invested in a nice, beafy sound card that offloads environmental sound effects and other audio processing to the dedicated hardware. Adding a USB adapter essentially nixes all that gear goodness, since Windows will treat it like a sound card. All Macs use line-in ports, which offer no signal boost.
There are many tricks that folks into high-end audio can pull to squeeze out every drop of detail from a set of cans. Similarly, other gamers I know who own PC s come across clearly when they speak. All in all, Sennheiser deserves its well-regarded name in audio. The set's only drawback is that it has an exceptionally long cord designed to reach from your head to the back of your computer, even if it's unusually far away. Even so, some gamers might find the cord unwieldy. With that aside, the PC s are likely some of the most comfortable and best-sounding headphones I've ever used.
Current page: Headset: Sennheiser PC Topics Belkin. See all comments Ive been looking at the G19 for some time now, ever since it came out, but I am not sure if I should just go for the Sidewinder x6 or the G15 which is still good and at a reasonable dollars where Im from Should I get it or wait for my next build I recently just purchased a Saitek Cyborg keyboard. Very impressed with it, loving it the moment we touched. Ive used the first Saitek Eclipse, and then the Eclipse 2.
The Eclipse 3 is out there; the Cyborg is basically just the gamer edition of it.
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