I made the mistake of believing some dumb guide online that recommended the Razer BlackShark v2 Pro for Linux. Literally the volume control is broken out of the box lol.

I just want a wireless headset. For listening to audio. And a mic. Don’t care for fancy features. Apparently too much to ask for a linux user.

What are y’all using and how is it working for you?

  • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    15 minutes ago
    1. why wireless?

    2. what budget?

    3. music?

    3a) what genres are your favorites?

    3b) what genres you don’t listen to?

    1. how old are you

    2. environment?

    3. what games are your favorites in the past?

    6a) what games are your favorites now?

    6b) what games are you looking forwards to?

  • FierroG@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    I Have a hyperx cloud flight (the first ones), very light, in arch based distros the range is pretty big (in mint and pop, for whatever reason, the range is abysmal), they work with no caveats on linux (though no battery report, there’s a script or two floating on the internet to have it with no hassle). I’m sure there are better options these days (better battery and sound quality), but these are the ones I have experience with.

    They’re not my first choice in audio, but they did so much for me when I had my kid, you can drop in and out of your pc without needing to remove your headphones, they don’t block much so you can even listen to the baby crying if you’re at a low volume (or you can just have one ear out), you can hang out in calls while holding the bb, etc.

    For any new parents out there, can’t tell you how much they did for me, in particular the combination of

    • being for PC (no latency, being able to get in and out of your gaming sessions or whatever you do without even having to take them off)
    • having a decent quality microphone next to your mouth (you don’t need to raise your voice and can be heard easily despite background noise, good signal to noise ratio)
    • not being that good at blocking sound, this is crucial when you can’t compromise your full attention but can have most of it.
    • being light weight (I know there are some wireless headphones that are bulky and not that light).
  • Psythik@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Don’t buy a wireless headset if you care about things like accurate audio positioning, sound quality, and latency. Get a good pair of over ear headphones and use a good condenser mic along with it (like what YouTubers and streamers use). If you don’t care about mic quality (or just don’t want a big bulky mic), they sell mics that can attach to your headphones.

    For most people on a $20-500 budget (so 99% of people), I recommend the Superlux HD681-AIR. The build quality is poor but it makes up for it in every other department.

    It has a mostly flat frequency response curve. There is some siblance in the highs—but it can be EQed out—or remedied with a piece of foam to muffle the sound a bit.

    The bass is deep and full without being muddy, and extends to around ~10hz, which is incredibly impressive for semi-open back headphones.

    Speaking of which, the semi-open back configuration gives you a wide, realistic soundstage and great imaging, which helps with pinpointing where sounds are coming from. If you want realistic 3D audio for things like movies, games, and music, it’s hard to find a headphone under $300 that can accurately activate your pinna just right (which is what you want if you want your audio to sound like it’s coming from all around you rather than inside your head). The Superlux cans are only $25. You cannot get better sound quality at this price point. The HD681-AIR gives you audiophile-quality sound for entry-level prices.

    Like I said, the only catch is the build quality of the headphones themselves. All plastic and feels very cheap, but none of that matters the moment you put them on and hear how amazing they sound (no joke, you have to step up to the $500+ price point to get better audio from a pair of headphones). Get a nice pair of velour earpads to replace the sub-par stock leather ones, and then beat the crap out of them until you break them. Then buy another pair.

  • Luffy@lemmy.ml
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    5 hours ago

    Sennheiser HD 280 pro

    Main difference beetween that and most other monitoring stuff is the plastic build, but it.only costs like 80€ vs 120-150€, and it has lower impedance if you don’t want a separate audio setup for it or want to buy it later

    • Muffi@programming.dev
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      5 hours ago

      This is by far the best headset you can get for that amount of money. Easily repaired, great sound quality, sturdy build. Love this model. I have had mine for almost a decade now.

  • pet the cat, walk the dog@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    If you like music, you might want to check your selected model(s) on the AutoEQ site for how close they are to the ideal response. I’ve had some headphones that had way too loud high frequences.

    Anything from Sennheiser or Audio-Technica should be great, but their Bluetooth stuff is pricey.

  • JTskulk@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    I love my Steelseries Arctis 7. It doesn’t need any software to configure at all, works out of the box in Linux. Has a nice hardware mixer right on the headphone so you can lower game sounds to hear voice chat better and vice versa.

    • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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      8 hours ago

      Is it corded? I think I have a 3, and got the one with 3.5mm plug. Never had an issue.

      • BlindFrog@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        I have the same, an old arctis 7, and it’s plug-and-play on Linux mint. It’s wireless with a USB-c dongle, but 3.5mm jack is an option.

        Once upon a time, I was worried I had to buy another headphones, but I used an aux cord to plug it into a headphone-amp for my electric guitar, and it just works. It turns on & off automatically with the aux cord. I suspect it has to be charged to still work, but I haven’t tested that.

      • JTskulk@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        Wireless with a USB dongle. Analog will never have issues, but this fancy wireless one doesn’t either :)

        • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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          6 hours ago

          How does this dial work which lowers game volume so you can hear voices?

          • JTskulk@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            The headset presents 2 separate audio devices to your computer, so you direct your games to use the headset game output and Discord or whatever to use headset voice. It’s pretty magical honestly, no tabbing out when you can’t hear a dude.

  • Jessica
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    15 hours ago

    I hope you aren’t playing any competitive games because wireless introduces extra latency and makes you play worse

    • PotatoesFallOP
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      2 hours ago

      Naw, and all the competitive games I’ve played in the past, trust me audio was not the bottleneck for my skill lol

    • FierroG@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Are there dedicated desktop wireless headsets with noticeable latency? My shitty hyperx cloud flight have no noticeable latency and I even played around with some audio settings (on linux, windows audio drivers are very limited) and got it to the point where I could use them to monitor my usb mic in real time (which, for anyone who knows, is a very latency sensitive use case).

      Afaik the latency thing is a problem with bluetooth.

  • Bluefruit@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I have never liked headsets. I wear glasses so over the ear headsets aren’t comfortable for me. Not to mention, headsets are often overpriced and dont sound as good as a dedicated mic with headphones IMO, but I also make music so audio is a bit more important to me. I also just like having separate devices so that if something breaks, I don’t have to throw out a whole device.

    xlr mic paired with audio interface and whatever flavor of headphones you want is my go to.

    I use a mxl 770 mic with a focusrite 2i2 interface and I use shure se215-K in ear monitors for headphones. I also use this setup for making music or for talking with friends over discord.

    Focusrite works great on Linux on I haven’t had any issues with this setup. This is a more expensive upfront but I haven’t bought a new mic or headphones in years so I think it works out to be more cost effective over time.

    For a wireless setup, if you’re OK with your mic being wired, you could get a decent USB mic and pair that with a pair of wireless headphones.

  • dukeofdummies@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    I’m just using a turtle beach headset, one of the stealth models that mute when you flip the mic up.

    Occasionally need to unplug the receiver but otherwise works well

  • moonpiedumplings@programming.dev
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    14 hours ago
    1. Bluetooth probably won’t be able to give you good quality audio and mic input at the same time. It doesn’t have enough bandwidth over a single channel, last time I tried. Of course that was probably like 5 years ago and things might’ve changed, like a theoretical workaround I thought about is the headset simply having two bluetooth reveivers and connecting twice. But yeah.

    Edit: I suspect jgrffn’s comment in the thread refutes the above. I might test later.

    1. Most of the proprietary wireless 2.4 ghz usb adapters I have tried have worked fine and better than bluetooth since they can do good audio and mic at low latencies. I have used logitech and corsair but my logitechs died on me (one I bought had the left side die and the other the right side :/) and the corsair earmuffs fell apart after I made the mistake of not being perfectly dry once. So I can’t really recommend my most used headsets.
  • JGrffn@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Sony XM5 earbuds. The most annoying part of them is their feature that connects to multiple devices at once, so I end up fighting my phone (Graphene) or gaming PC (Bazzite) midway through a business call on my work laptop (believe it or not, also Bazzite).

    So yeah, their only problem is they work with everything and can prioritize sounds from other devices mid-call. You can just not connect them to everything at the same time, or turn off Bluetooth on the phone n stuff while not in use.

    I’m pretty sure you can just buy any device like that (so not Razer, and generally not gaming) and it’ll just work on Linux. Gaming stuff in general usually has a hard time working even on Windows due to absolute dog-shit firmware & software implementations.

  • the_swagmaster@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    I got a pair of Fractal Scapes. The software to modify them is just a website so it’s easy to EQ them on Linux (I run bazzite). The EQ profiles are also saved locally so once it’s set you never have to look at the website again. The works dick worked straight away and volume control+ play/pause work massively on Linux which is great

    • BigDaddyRAAB@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      15 hours ago

      Just got these recently they’re awesome. Wireless charging, Bluetooth support, flip mic to mute, really comfortable and sound great.

    • Ghostie@lemmy.zip
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      24 hours ago

      Bookmarking this suggestion. I’ve used fractal cases before with great suggest. Didn’t know they got into headsets.

      • the_swagmaster@lemmy.zip
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        21 hours ago

        It’s their first one and so far I’m quite happy with it! The dock is especially nice and one of the main selling points to me from a convenience perspective and it works great. I’m lazier than ever XD