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Steelseries artics pro
Steelseries artics pro









steelseries artics pro

The wireless version, meanwhile, is more sensible, as this comes sans RGB to help you save battery life. Against my better judgment, I'm also quite partial to the subtle ring of RGB lighting round the ear cups' soft touch casing as well, even though I know RGB lighting on a headset is completely and utterly pointless when you can't actually see it. Underneath its stretchy black ski goggle material, its steel headband feels lovely to the touch, and the soft, plush ear cups are like two puffy clouds gently caressing your cheeks. Starting from £179 / $179 for the regular USB headset (or £249 / $249 for the GameDAC model and £299 / $329 for the wireless one), the Arctis Pro is a proper nice bit of kit. There are three Arctis Pros altogether: the entry-level USB headset, the top-end 2.4GHz wireless and Bluetooth version, and the middle one I've got here, the Arctis Pro and GameDAC. Enter its brand-new shiny upmarket sibling, the Arctis Pro.īorrowing the same understated design and ski goggle headband as the rest of the Arctis line, the Pro takes everything up a notch, introducing Hi Res audio support, a dash of RGB lighting around the ear cups and some primo build quality to make it extra feel durable and luxurious. Ever since the Steelseries Arctis 7 rocked my eardrums at the end of last year to claim the top spot in my gaming headset rankings, no other gaming headset has even come close to matching its supreme comfort or exceptional sound quality - until now.











Steelseries artics pro