Not exact matches
Though it has the ability to switch to four different presets — Signature Sound, Bass
Boost, Bass +
Treble Boost, and Vocal
Boost — the quality of the Signature Sound
mode was excellent in every test I ran, holding most true to the audio mix that developers intended for their game and allowing me to hear my party chat when I was in one.
You'll hear these tones when you switch among the headset's four equalization
modes, which include balanced sound,
treble boost, bass
boost and chat
boost.
It has six selectable sound
modes (Standard, Cinema, Clear Voice III, Cricket, Music, Game) that
boost, bass, mid-range, or
treble and for most TV, standard or Clear Voice is best.
On tracks that happen to have gobs of intense sub-bass content, like The Knife's «Silent Shout,» the
Mode EQ brings plenty of deep bass presence even in the
treble - focused EQ
mode, but the sound is a more natural, less Beats - style bass
boosting.
You can also opt to disable surround sound in stereo
mode, which includes options for
boosting bass,
treble and voice.
Combat sounded especially satisfying — the headset's Bass
Boost preset made every punch and kick sound meaty, while Bass and
Treble mode provided more of a sharp, bone - cracking sensation.