NZXT Relay Headset and SwitchMix Review: Innovative Convenience

The NZXT Relay Headset is not noteworthy by itself. It’s a stable gaming headset with first rate audio high quality, comfy earcups, and an understated design. However NZXT swung for the fences with its foray into the world of audio. Paired with NZXT’s SwitchMix accent, the Relay Headset will get way more fascinating.

The NZXT Relay Headset ($100) and the NZXT SwitchMix ($130) are offered individually, however they’re designed for use collectively (together with NZXT’s Relay Speakers and Subwoofer). The headset plugs into the SwitchMix, which plugs into your PC, and you need to use the SwitchMix to regulate the amount with the enormous fashionable knob or steadiness between sport audio and voice chat with a easy slider.

However the headset hangar is the star of the present. It has a built-in stress plate swap that tells the SwitchMix mixer to vary gadgets between the headset and your exterior audio system. No extra fidgeting with gadget settings in Home windows, forgetting to swap outputs, and unintentionally waking your accomplice along with your sport. Simply take the headset off the hangar and your PC will swap to it. Put the headset again on and audio will come out of your audio system. It’s a dream come true—when it really works.

One Easy Change

The SwitchMix accent doesn’t include the Relay Headset, and it prices barely greater than the headset itself, however that feels acceptable. It is fairly distinctive. It is available in two components: a mixer and a headphone stand.

The mixer is a sturdy but modern brick with a big fashionable knob and a slider alongside the suitable facet. The underside of the mixer has 4 round rubber pegs on the underside that match neatly inside a grid of holes on the bottom of the stand. It’s a pleasant little design contact that allows you to rotate the mixer so it’s positioned finest on your desktop setup. The knob and slider are giant and distinct, making it simple to regulate them with out wanting, which may be essential while you’re attempting to regulate audio in-game.

{Photograph}: Eric Ravenscraft

The swap within the stand is definitely essentially the most interesting a part of this setup, and it pulls off this social gathering trick in a low-tech means that’s each a blessing and a detriment. A small 3.5-mm connector runs from the bottom of the stand right into a port on the rear of the mixer. A USB-C port on the rear of the mixer runs to your pc, whereas two extra 3.5-mm ports run to a speaker and (wired) headset.

This setup, sadly, implies that the hangar swap works solely with wired headsets, and may solely hook up with external speakers via a single 3.5-mm port. That limits the quantity of {hardware} this setup will work with. However when it does work, it’s pleasant. I want to look at movies on my desktop with my speakers however placed on my headphones whereas I play Overwatch 2 with my friends. Choosing up the headset from the stand, the audio converted earlier than I even received the headphones on my head. The phrase “seamless” was invented for experiences like this.

The SwitchMix additionally capabilities as a standalone digital-to-analog converter (DAC), although in my expertise, this is not a very noteworthy profit. The SwitchMix helps 24-bit/96-kHz audio output, however I did not discover a significant distinction within the audio in comparison with plugging the headset immediately into my PC.

One Stable Headset

The Relay is a stable first entry from NZXT. The earcups have a easy matte floor in both black or white. I examined the white model and it seemed significantly fashionable. The froth contained in the cups is gentle and comfy, and the headset is light-weight sufficient to put on for hours with out discomfort.

Overhead view of black and white headphones with attached mic sitting on wooden surface

{Photograph}: Eric Ravenscraft

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