PCPOWERPLAY

Razer Kraken Ultimate

Some iconic cans get the luxury treatment – and they’re worth the extra outlay.

- PRICE $229 http://razer.com

The lime green glow and marketing hyperbole of Razer’s peripheral­s have been around since the earth’s mantle first cooled and simple lifeforms began appearing. The Boomslang mouse was there at the turn of the millennium, when we first got interested in playing games against other people, live, on the Internet, and it remains as iconic as it is prepostero­usly named.

Since those early days in the gaming peripheral­s market, the competitio­n’s heated up considerab­ly, but Razer remains a big player thanks not just to quality mice, keyboards, and audio gear, but marketing and really, really fancy packaging. So, it’s no surprise to see the $229 Kraken Ultimate headset arrive in a box covered in spot UV treatment and pithy slogans such as “Make sound your weapon.” If anything, it’s slightly disappoint­ing not to be welcomed to “the cult of Razer” by the inner packaging, as the pre-Ultimate iterations of its headsets used to do, but we’ll work past it. Its packaging is smartly presented; this is what we’re trying to say.

So, too, is the headset itself, resplenden­t with an underglow of RGB around both earcups and a bright RGB Razer logo in the center of each one. Good-quality artificial leather surrounds two very generous memory foam pads around the contact points, and while the memory foam is actually quite thin under the headband, it’s still very comfortabl­e thanks to the band’s broad dimensions. A Razer logo lies imprinted on the top of the headband, also finished in artificial leather, while an aluminum frame holds the whole unit together. At just under 400 grams, it’s not going for the featherwei­ght category, but as silly as it may sound, it feels like a light 400 grams when it’s on your head. The cushioning is ample for glasses-wearers to maintain their spectacles while playing, and although this reviewer still prefers SteelSerie­s’s ski-goggle headband design for longterm comfort, the Kraken is still up to the task when it comes to marathon sessions.

EXTRAS ORDINARY

For a model bearing the “Ultimate” nomenclatu­re, it’s a relatively barebones package – one 2m braided cable connects the headset to your PC via USB, and with no inline remote, the only controls are a volume wheel on the rear of the left earcup and a toggle switch for surround sound (don’t bother) just above it. The mic mute switch is placed right on the mic itself, and a red light band clicks on when you do mute it. It’s here where our only real misgivings lie – this is an expensive headset, and it’s not working very hard to entice you with added extras.

Let’s get to the heart of the matter: These cans sound incredible. For a long time, “50mm drivers” was marketing talk for “too much bass,” but the custom-tuned neodymium 50mm monsters here have insane levels of clarity, which simply aren’t diminished by all the low end. It’s a brilliantl­y tuned tone, unsuitable for monitoring audio recording and the like – but that was never the point.

PHIL IWANIUK

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