• Sat. Nov 30th, 2024

Get into the zone with Acezone’s new A-Spire Wireless Headset

Byadmin

Oct 7, 2024

AceZone A-Spire Wireless – YouTube
AceZone A-Spire Wireless - YouTube


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If you’re a casual gamer, then it’s possible that sound is the one aspect of your gaming setup that you’ve been content to overlook. Maybe those 15-year-old 3.5mm dual speakers have been doing an OK job, and until you’ve experienced first-hand how a state-of-the-art gaming headset can change your experience, then you simply don’t know what you’re missing out on. It’s a different story for pro gamers, for whom finely tuned sound has long been a vital asset on the battlefield—being able to identify that footsteps are coming up behind you at 150 degrees and not 180 degrees can be the difference between life and death as you turn to face your attacker. At the non-competitive end of the gaming spectrum, a high-quality gaming headset can pull you into game worlds like never before.

But whether you’re a newbie or a veteran, you should be extracting every bit of immersion out of whatever game you’re playing, which is why the AceZone A-Spire Wireless Hybrid Gaming Headset should be on your radar.

(Image credit: AceZone)

The new A-Spire Wireless connects to your PC via a USB-C dongle, and by the combined power of Bluetooth 5.4 and LE Audio delivers ultra-low latency that’s up to triple the speed delivered by the 2.4Ghz dongles you get on most gaming headsets. This means that in a tense battle royale standoff you’ll hear your enemies before they hear you, and that sound is synced up with the on-screen action right down to the millisecond. The 35-hour battery life is among the highest on the market, and you can always hook yourself up to your PC via USB-C for simultaneous charging and seamless wired sound.

A DAC (digital-to-analog converter) is present in most audio devices, converting all that digital sound data from a game into analog signal for your ears, but a high-quality one will ensure the final sound comes with minimal latency and without distortions or extraneous ‘noise.’ To that end, the new A-Spire Wireless contains a built-in precision DAC with 24-Bit/384kHz to ensure the acoustics reaching your ears are of the highest quality—every bullet whizzing past your ear, every clang of steel swords punctuated with absolute clarity.

(Image credit: AceZone)

A lack of outside distractions is critical when gaming; you don’t want to hear the stomping of a neighbour’s feet upstairs or the squeals of children running around the living room. So instead of banging on the ceiling with a broom or trying to negotiate with your hard-bargaining progeny, just switch on the A-Spire Wireless’ Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) to lose yourself in the gaming soundscape. AceZone’s Advanced Hybrid ANC stands out because it is designed specifically for gaming rather than for, say, listening to music on the train, so it’ll block out background noise whether you’re playing at home or at an event. The innovations of this technology also reduce brain fatigue during longer play sessions, which invariably means even longer play sessions! 

The mic has powerful noise-cancelling too, eliminating up to 98% of unwanted background noise. Beyond that, it offers crisp low-loss communication to ensure that your commands to teammates in the heat of battle (or, more fittingly for the season, shrieks of fear during an asymmetric online horror game) come across loud and clear. An upcoming update will let you use a number of EQ profiles for your mic—or create your own—so stay tuned on that front.

(Image credit: AceZone)

If you’re already in the AceZone loop and owned the previous iteration of the A-Spire, then this is a significant upgrade thanks to its upgraded Qualcomm chipset, Bluetooth 5.4 with LE Audio, and faster-than-ever USB-C dongle. It’s also way more customisable through the AceZone app, letting you set game-specific EQ presets for big titles like Call of Duty and Apex Legends, or even specific genres like open-world games (alternatively, you can just create your own bespoke EQ profiles). Finally, thanks to the built-in DSP, you can store your settings in the headset itself, carrying them over between different platforms.



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