Razer Barracuda X Wireless Gaming Headset Review 2022

Razer Barracuda X Wireless Gaming Headset Review

In this guide you will read about Razer Barracuda X Wireless Gaming Headset Review. Razer’s Barracuda X wireless gaming headset nails it in the space of solace, style and flexibility. With its USB-C wireless dongle, it functions admirably with a PC, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5 (PS5)/PS4 and Android telephone. The choice to utilize a separable 3.5mm link implies it’s valuable on different gadgets as well. Fundamentally, it offers excellent sound quality at a headset in its cost range and across the range of viable gadgets.

At $100 (as of composing), the jars hope to rival the best gaming headsets with a long battery life and adaptability. Be that as it may, in case you’re after preeminent virtual encompass sound or don’t have any desire to need to stress over your mic’s area when woofing orders on the war zone, you might need to rethink.

Comfort and Design

Having once claimed a radiant orange Razer Kraken headset, I was charmingly amazed by the inconspicuous, classy and downplayed plan of the Barracuda X. Worked of strong, matte-dark plastic with a metal-supported customizable headband, the solitary brand components are unobtrusive Razer logos emblazoned on the headband and on the earcups.

The earcups are extremely low-profile, especially for a wireless gaming headset, which frequently convey a lot thicker jars. Nothing about the headset suggests ‘gamer,’ so you can wear them on a video call or out in the open without selling out your advanced life as a slayer of wickedness.

Tipping the scales at simply 0.55 pounds (250g), the Barracuda X is one of the more agreeable headsets I’ve worn. For examination, the Creative SXFI Air Gamer, another wireless gaming headset however with Bluetooth as well, is 0.75 pounds. The Razer jars’ weaved texture covered memory pads held my ears back from getting excessively warm during testing. They’re sufficiently thick to hold the drivers back from contacting the ears.

The Barracuda X tracks down an excellent harmony between conveying a strong hold and not exerting tension on your head. The headset stayed open to during the entire day utilization with my fairly enormous noggin (I wear covers one snap from maximum size), and my more modest craniumed child detailed it cozily held his head also. The earcups pivot 90 degrees, permitting them to easily fit against your head and to lie level for capacity.

The entirety of the controls and ports are on the left earcup. There’s a quiet catch, volume dial, power switch, 3.5mm jack, USB-C charging port and a jack for the separable mouthpiece. The force button is multi-work: Long-press it to flip force, tap to acknowledge/end a call, twofold tap to skirt forward a track or triple-tap to avoid back.

I liked the effortlessness of the simple volume dial. While plans like the SXFI Air Gamer that let you contact the earpad to change volume are somewhat cool, the straightforwardness and accuracy of finding and turning a simple volume dial is difficult to contend against.

The USB-C wireless transmitter dongle is reduced, and its T shape functioned admirably with my Nintendo Switch and Android telephone, as it holds the connector back from extending out excessively far.

Nonetheless, its width implies that it will impede contiguous ports on certain PCs. I needed to utilize the included USB A-to-C link with my PC on the grounds that the wide transmitter impeded the port I required for my external screen.

It would have been decent if Razer had obliged connecting the wireless dongle to the headset, or possibly incorporated a fundamental conveying case for when you’re moving it. You can’t store the dongle in the headset’s USB port since that is hindered by the receiver blast.

Specifications of Razer Barracuda X

Driver Type Customized dynamic 40mm (Razer TriForce)
Impedance 32 Ohms @ 1 KHz
Frequency Response 20Hz – 20KHz
Microphone Type Cardioid, detachable
Connectivity USB-C dongle, 3.5mm cable
Cables 4.25 feet (1.3mm) 3.5mm, 4.9 feet (1.5m) USB-A to USB-C charging cable, 4.9 feet (1.5m) USB-A to USB-C extender
Weight 0.55 pounds (250g)
Lighting None
Software 7.1 Surround Sound for Windows

Pros & Cons

Pros
  • Good audio quality
  • Simple, tasteful design
  • Numerous connectivity options
  • Lightweight and comfortable
  • Excellent battery life
Cons
  • Mic has to be very close for clear audio

Microphone

At the point when I previously tried the Barracuda X’s separable, unidirectional cardioid receiver, I was fairly disappointed by the quality. My voice was a bit calm, and there was an observable absence of lucidity. Then, at that point, I changed the blast so the pickup was simply 0.25 inch from my lips, and the quality changed drastically. At the nearer distance, volume was what I expected, and clearness fundamentally improved.

The mic’s affectability (specced for – 42 ± 3dB at 1 KHz) is with the end goal that you’ll have to situate it extremely near your mouth for the best quality. My voice actually wasn’t just about as clear as it sounds on the React+, one of the most mind-blowing I’ve tried, however the vocals were sharp and resonance was exact.

The flexible amplifier blast works really hard of remaining set up, which for this situation is essential on the grounds that the mic has a positive perfect balance and performs best when exceptionally near your lips.

A removable froth tip serves to adequately dispense with pops. However, be careful; it can likewise perform twofold responsibility as a toy when eliminated and pursued by an inquisitive feline. (I in the long run discovered it.)

The Barracuda X’s mic worked effectively of dropping external commotion. I did a portion of my testing in a lodging with perceptible forced air system murmur, and the mic didn’t get that that by any stretch of the imagination. Additionally, it possibly got keystrokes on my mechanical console when I was effectively talking.

Audio Performance

Razer’s 40mm TriForce dynamic drivers work really hard of conveying clear sound across the recurrence range at a good volume. Razer promotes the plan’s different chambers for bass, mid-reach and high pitch sounds, and the outcome is shockingly clear sound for a gaming headset in this value range.

It’s really a similar chamber plan as the wired Razer BlackShark V2’s 50mm drivers, just downsized 20%. In spite of the more modest drivers, I had the option to stretch volume up to the edge of open to tuning in without presenting any twisting.

The wireless transmitter functions admirably, with no distinguishable slack or quality misfortune when contrasted with wired. The association was strong and never dropped until I moved to one more space around 30 feet away.

I tossed complex gaming sound and music at the Barracuda X, and it took care of everything great with no sloppiness or lost sounds in layered sound conditions. That included across PC games, similar to Call of Duty: Warzone, too Switch games, similar to Hades, in addition to a FLAC tear of a Dark Side of the Moon CD.I had no issues separating sounds or sneaking around discussions in occupied city road conditions in Watch Dogs: Legion on the PC, something not in every case valid on headsets with more muddied sound.

The solitary region where the sound was marginally missing was in the least, most intense bass notes, which sounded fairly common contrasted with the upgraded bass on gaming headsets like the Fnatic React+ and Creative’s SXFI Air Gamer. The Barracuda X’s explosions and bass notes are available and clear however do not have the punch of those contending headsets.

I likewise messed around on the Nintendo Switch, PS4, an Android Motorola Z2 and (however not recorded as an upheld stage) a 12.9-inch iPad Pro, and the Barracuda X worked really hard. From the music and explosions in Star Realms on the Android and iPad, to the ecological sounds in the no man’s land of Seattle in The Last of Us Part II on PS4, to the soundtrack of my isolate year.

Also Read: Elgato Stream Deck MK.2 Review

Animal Crossing on the Switch, sound was clear and the association was solid. I likewise connected the Barracuda X to the 3.5-inch jack of a Xbox Series X regulator, zoomed around in Flight Simulator and explored Night City in Cyberpunk and had a comparatively good experience.

Sound disconnection is respectable for a home or calm office climate, however you will hear your environmental elements on a 737 or swarmed passenger train. The headset worked really hard of not spilling sound externally; somebody sitting 6 feet from me could scarcely hear the explosions in a Battlefield V meeting in a peaceful room and just when I had the volume wrenched up to an almost awkward level.

Music quality was shockingly acceptable across the range, from prog to old style to hip bounce. The nature of the Nu Deco Ensemble’s instrumentals on Larkin Poe’s Every Bird that Flies was shockingly practically identical to my more audiophile-outfitted Sennheiser Momentum 3 headset.

On the contrary side of the range, Kendrick Lamar’s vocals on Kanye’s “No More Parties in LA” had lucidity not apparent on the AirPods Pro that I used to pay attention to the melody for examination.

The lone ding on the music comes at the low finish of the sound range, where the bass lucidity is acceptable however needs punch and thunder. That might frustrate audience members raised on the supported bass of Bose and Beats jars.

Like most gaming headsets in this value range, the Barracuda X depends on programming for encompass sound, instead of equipment. The headset incorporates a 7.1-channel virtual encompass sound extra utility for Windows 10 gamers.

However you can move up to THX Spatial Audio for $10 extra (a half rebate over retail, however Razer incorporates THX with a portion of its different headsets) through the previously mentioned utility. The Barracuda X additionally upholds the PS5’s Tempest 3D sound. 3D sound likewise functions admirably on the Xbox Series X, with Windows Sonic and the extra Dolby and DTS arrangements all upheld.

Battery Life

Razer rates the headset for 20 hours on a charge, and I really settled the score better outcomes in my testing, with the headset enduring 24:28 over a couple of days at volumes going from around 50-80%. When there’s no other option, the headset works with the force off when utilizing the simple 3.5mm jack.

The lone battery meter is the LED at the lower part of the left earcup. It turns strong green when you’re completely energized. You’ll hear an admonition tone and the LED will abandon green to red when you reach 30% excess. There’s another tone and LED blazing when you’re down to 10%. It would have been pleasant in case there was somewhere around an approach to press a fasten and get a sound sign of battery level, since there’s no product based battery meter. The Barracuda X accompanies a USB-C to USB-A link for charging.

Conclusion

Razer’s Barracuda X’s is an adaptable, inexpensive decision for PC, just as Switch, PlayStation, and even Android gamers. It has shockingly great sound quality at the cost, a respectable mouthpiece, a truly agreeable plan and extraordinary battery life. Absence of Bluetooth and Xbox support implies iOS and Xbox gamers are stuck utilizing a wired association, yet in case that is not an issue, the Barracuda X merits genuine thought.

On the off chance that you intend to think carefully with an iPhone, Creative’s $150 SXFI Air Gamer may be a superior decision, with its Bluetooth network, however you’ll be fastened to a link when gaming on different stages. On the off chance that Razer added Bluetooth to the Barracuda X plan, these would really be do-it-all earphones.

The most immediate contest to the Barracuda X, the Steelseries Arctis 1 Wireless, has an almost indistinguishable featureset and comes in at a similar cost. It has an accessible Xbox wireless-viable rendition (which likewise deals with PS4/PS5), yet it needs PC encompass sound drivers, and its mouthpiece is more well-suited to get outside clamor.

On the off chance that you need jars that lose the line without forfeiting other key angles, the Barracuda X is a strong alternative.