7/24/2023 0 Comments Logitech g733 lightspeed wirelessWhile you can get decent sound out of the mic, thanks to G Hubs Blue audio options, it's not nearly as good as the extendable, retractable mic on the G935, or the long, windscreen-capped mic on the Pro X Wireless. There's also the microphone, which was too short to get anywhere close to my mouth. It's a profoundly annoying setup, particularly since there's no easy way to turn the lights off when the G733 is hooked up to a console and you can't use the G Hub software. If you don't wear glasses, you may see them reflected in your monitor's bezels, or in any other glossy surface on your desk. Whenever the LED strips are active, you'll see them reflected in your glasses, constantly drawing your eye away from whatever you wanted to focus on. If you wear glasses, you know exactly where this is going. But while most headsets at least consign these strips to the sides, the G733 puts them on the front of the earcups. I've always found these strips to be totally needless, since unlike a keyboard or a mouse, you cant see a headset while you're using it. Like a lot of high-end gaming headsets, the G733 features programmable RGB LED strips. It all works well enough, but it's worth discussing the RGB lighting in particular. Here, you can toggle surround sound, program equalization levels, set up game-specific profiles and so forth. Like all modern Logitech G products, the Logitech G733 works with the Logitech G Hub software. However, a Logitech representative told me that the G733 was not guaranteed to work with the Switch in the first place, so perhaps any kind of compatibility is better than none. My only small nitpick was about the Switch, on which volume can vary wildly from "almost too soft" on one level, to "almost too loud" on the next. Performance was good across the board, particularly the directional sound of demon attacks in Doom Eternal and the excellent balance among dialogue, sound effects and music in Ghost of Tsushima. I tested the G733 with Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition, Marvel's Avengers, Doom Eternal and Telltale's Batman: The Enemy Within on PC, as well as Ghost of Tsushima on PS4 and Tales of Vesperia: Definitive Edition on Switch. Just don't expect the same sound quality you'd get from a $200 wireless headset - or even a $150 model. While the soundscape is a little flat and the headset doesn't excel with any genre in particular, it'll get you through any game at a sub-tournament level. If you tweak all three of them enough, you can make the headset sound a little better than its default configuration. It has stereo options it has surround sound options it has equalization options. The Logitech G733 delivers perfectly good sound for both gaming and music. I didn't have any trouble wearing the G733 for hours at a time, even with glasses on. Once you do get them in place, the earcups don't always make a complete seal, although they're plush and comfortable otherwise. It's not impossible to get the G733 to stay in place, but the process is much more difficult than it needs to be. The elastic band can never quite decide whether it wants to sit on the front or the back of the skull, and the fit is a little different either way. Even after that, you have to adjust each earcup individually, since each one can slide up and down a few notches. Instead of an adjustable Velcro strap, the G733 lets you move the strap between two different pegs on each side - one of which was too tight, and the other of which was too loose, in my experience.
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