Gaming PerformanceĪssuming you can keep it on your head long enough to play a game, the Stealth 600 sounds spectacular.
The ear cups were comfortable, he said, but they didn't create a good seal at all. He had the same problems as I did with the headset's strange fit (he thought he was wearing it backward at first), but he also thought the whole thing felt cheap and hard to adjust. I handed the Stealth 600 off to a co-worker, and he absolutely despised it. As it is, it's an irregularity, and not an extremely agreeable one. As such, it sits just behind the crown, rather than just behind the forehead, which is not as natural a position.Īt first, the headset felt like it might fall off at any moment - even though, in reality, it stayed right where it was supposed to. The Stealth 600 has a strange, upright construction, unlike most gaming headsets, which tend to lean forward a bit. Unfortunately, comfortable ear cups are only half the battle. At first, the headset felt like it might fall off at any moment. As a bespectacled individual, I can confirm that the headset is unusually easy on the ears, managing to make a good aural seal without ever pressing down too hard. Turtle Beach boasts that the Stealth 600 uses technology called "ProSpecs" to make its ear cups easier on folks who wear glasses. While making the left ear cup the functional center of the whole device makes sense from a cost-saving perspective, it's rather crowded from design and aesthetic perspectives. The left ear cup (which also houses the charging port the right ear cup is positively barren by comparison) has a power button, a pairing button and an equalization button, which lets you switch among four modes. Beyond that, all the buttons are pretty simple.