San Francisco's a fine city, but like any major metropolitan area the most common option for housing is a "cozy" hole in the wall with little room for furniture, much less hefty, neighbor-vexing sound systems.
Enter the gaming headset: a decent pair of cans will offer an appreciable aural improvement in merry-making, whether you're taking potshots at zombies or enjoying your new Britney Spears record. Razer's latest is the Kraken 7.1, a gorgeous piece of equipment bedecked in the peripheral maker's trademark black and green-LED motif. A mere $99 gets you two ear pieces (one for each ear), a mic, and a lengthy USB cable to plug it into your PC or Mac.
I kid. Like any good technology arms race, the modern headset needs to do a bit more than serve up sound to command lofty prices. The Kraken has chosen to prey on my one weakness—virtual 7.1 surround sound, a game changer (in the right games) that would otherwise require setting up more studio monitors and audio cable than my humble abode has square footage for.
A natural evolution
Last spring I lent an ear to Razer's Tiamat 7.1 gaming headset, and enjoyed it immensely. It's expensive ($200) and requires a 5.1 or (ideally) 7.1 surround-sound capable sound card or motherboard to be a worthwhile purchase. When you have all that, you'll still spend a bit of time twiddling knobs to get the audio just right. But once that's all set, the ten drivers built into the Tiamat's ear pieces serve up a luscious surround-soundscape that's just about worth the price of entry, if you're picky about something as nebulous as sense of space and aural immersion in games.
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