The Coolest Razer Headset Threw Out the Design Rulebook

Alex Rowe
6 min readSep 24, 2024
Closeup of the left ear cup of the Razer BlackShark V2 HyperSpeed gaming headset, showing its imprinted logo and volume knob. A keyboard and some other gaming peripherals sit in the background.
This big knob is a fully digital volume control, without the fuzziness or channel imbalance that sometimes plagues analog knobs. Photo taken by the author.

Razer is one of the biggest mainstream names in PC peripherals, and I doubt that’ll change any time soon. They made a brand legacy for themselves not by engineering bland high performance gear, but rather by emphasizing flash and style over substance. Their loud and beefy product designs infused RGB lighting into everything to make it the expected “gamer” aesthetic standard, and even though they’ve made some big strides in the last few years on audio performance, they’re still more concerned about their headsets looking good on streams and videos than providing great sound.

Scrolling through their headset products is an exercise in how much visual intensity you can tolerate. At one time, they were even filling all their higher end audio gear with haptic feedback motors to vibrate your head with bass, a bold choice that they’ve abandoned in recent days.

One particular seemingly boring midrange product, right in the middle of their product line, is their secret best headset offering. It follows almost none of the garish design rules of their other headsets, and offers audio and wireless performance far beyond its price range. If this headset were the Razer norm rather than the exception, the company might be known more for its interesting audio tech than its desire to strap fun kitty ears and lights to things.

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Alex Rowe

I write about gaming, tech, music, and their industries. Audio producer, video editor, and former magazine game critic. Look mom, I’m using my English degree!