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Product Description
Designed for wireless gamers, the GSP 670 from EPOS delivers detailed sound with no strings attached. Fully compatible with the EPOS Gaming Suite—an included software platform with a wide range of sound adjustment tools—the GP 670 allows you to customize your 7.1 surround sound, adjust chat and game audio independently, and even tune your microphone Read More
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I had had these ones for about 6 months now, and I don't like them. The main reason is the way they behave under Windows. They appear as 3 different speakers \ headsets under windows, and it is hard to know which option is the active one.
I have had the PC373d for a few years, and the mic has started to play around, so I bought these ones as replacements. The sound is good, the mic is very average, but they are a pain to use at least under windows.
You have the option to use them as Bluetooth, dongle, and USB. Therefore, they appear as 3 different devices in Windows. The BT option give you a terrible sound experience, The other 2 sound is good. If you are connected wireless with the dongle or BT and plug the USB to charge them, then USB becomes active, so you have to change the default windows device, but the USB devices does not become active for some programs. And then the dongle becomes active for no reason, and sometimes none of them work.
I wanted to use them for Microsoft Teams, music (Spotify, Tidal, etc), and games. Yes they are not Teams certified, but the PC373D were not certified but they work great. Even if only used for gaming, sometimes they just go missing in action, until I remove the dongle and switch them off and on..
I like the fit, no as confy as the PC373, but they are better than the Logitech 933. Sound is good, Microsoft is not too bad, but the usability of these headsets is terrible.
I am still in the pursue to find good all rounder headset with excellent sound, excellent MIC with noise cancelling that works with UC programs and games.
A bit late bringing this Drop back. There's just too many better headsets and 2 more coming on the market later this month. This month we'll get the HyperX Cloud Alpha wireless and the Alienware tri-mode wireless both at $200.
An interesting detail about these... they work with PS5’s USB ports!
They also work in a PS4, but the feature set is more compelling on PS5 and PC. Because the dongle is a UAC1 (USB Audio Class 1) device, all three platforms will recognize as an output and mic input device, so you can hear game sound and have a chat wirelessly. There’s no lag either... though the headset does support Bluetooth if you want to use it with your phone, Bluetooth fundamentally has lag that is detrimental or confusing when playing games (see my “Is Bluetooth as good as Wired” article here on Drop!). With the dongle, it instead uses a high bandwidth wireless standard and its own purpose-built codec superior to aptX Low Latency to have no detectable lag, high audio quality, and a microphone return channel. Range should be as good as a cordless phone.
For people that appreciate Surround, the dongle can accept a 5.1 or 7.1 surround feed from a computer, and apply an optional surround DSP to it, before transmitting it wirelessly to the headset. Surround + Wireless is RARE on the market. The PS4 only uses generic drivers, so it can only send 2.0 stereo, but if the game (like “The Last Of Us,” Battlefield, or “Overwatch”) has a built in headphone surround option, you can use that (I recommend against “double stacking” surround effects). PS5 still uses generic drivers, but makes surround a standard option with the PS5’s built-in Tempest 3D Engine hardware accelerated sound, and can send that 1,000 speaker simulated full 3D surround bubble as a headphone mix out through the USB port.
I don’t have one myself, but it checks a lot of boxes for me! I did get to borrow a GSP 500 from Dekoni Audio, when they wanted me to write about their EarPads they made for that headphone, and apparently the GSP 500, 600, and 670 use the same pad mounts. The GSP 500 was a bit bigger on the head than my PC38X and PC37X, but it wasn’t weird while gaming at home, and the volume wheel felt like an upgrade. The earcup pressure adjustment was a neat idea in concept, but I didn’t feel much difference, so I left it at its widest setting. The very welcome “flip to mute” boom mic was back, though it was a bit shorter and less in my face (I don’t remember but that might reduce the times people will hear you exhale 😅).
If you’d like me to do a feature “deep dive,” @ your local Drop rep and tell them to send me one 😂
EvshrugNot sure how helpful it will be, but by this time next month (hopefully) I should have measurements of the whole EPOS gaming line.
As by then, I should have my IEC711 rig set up.
Skyrim: Special Edition and Fallout 4 and this headset.
I had an issue in both games where the voices from NPCs would like become more more less muffled when I moved my camera listening to them. With any other headphone I had, there was no issue.
I read something about how it had to do with the surround sound in the headphones.
Hopefully this either helps someone not waste their time, or someone knows a fix. I hope the latter, because other than that they were awesome headphones.
I see! For myself I'm rather unfamiliar with wireless headsets. Was recently looking at wired headsets because my friends needed them haha! My experience with headphones did help in that regard though. I'm most interested in the PC38x so far, although I think its mic will be lacking compared to the capabilities of the Motu M2 I'll be driving it from
phoenixsongHeard great things about the PC38X. Haven't tried one myself. Hopefully you manage to find something great for your friend.
I ended up managing to preorder the new Xbox Wireless Headset for $99 to try it out. Interested to see how it performs as one of the more affordable wireless gaming headsets out there.