The Best Gaming Headsets for Every System

Lend depth and drama to your gameplay with the right gaming headset for any console or device.

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Best Gaming Headset for Most People
SteelSeries Arctis Nova 3P Wireless
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Best Upgrade Gaming Headset
Razer BlackShark V3 Pro
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Another Great Gaming Headset
Logitech Pro X 2
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Best Features
SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wired/Wireless Headset
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Honorable Mentions

SteelSeries Arctis Nova 5X: The Arctis Nova 5X Wireless (8/10, WIRED Review) is one of the few gaming headsets that can pair with every game console you could possibly have. The ear cups are soft and comfortable for longer gaming sessions, and the headset has a battery to match, lasting up to 60 hours on a single charge. The audio quality is surprisingly crisp and clear given how inexpensive this headset is. While playing Hades II, I was able to make out the clangs of Hephaestus' hammer or the whooshes of Chronos' scythe with enough clarity to save my life on more than one occasion. —Eric Ravenscraft

SteelSeries Arctis 7P+: This solid PlayStation-focused headset reaches over 30 hours of battery life and has a USB-C dongle that makes it easier to also connect to devices like the Switch or your phone. It sounds great, and the ear cups are reasonably comfortable for long gaming sessions. —Eric Ravenscraft

HyperX Cloud Mix 2: This headset is comfortable, with soft, spacious ear cups and a subdued black design. The ANC performance is impressive for a pair of headphones at this price, and you can swap to transparency mode with the dedicated ANC button on the right ear cup. In keeping with HyperX's pattern of battery life dominance, the Cloud Mix 2 gets more than 100 hours of battery life under normal usage, though that can drop down to the 70- to 80-hour range while using ANC. —Eric Ravenscraft

Corsair Void Wireless V2 (8/10, WIRED Review): While I was impressed with the sound quality, this updated headset from Corsair lands in the middle of some other great headsets price-wise. They do have Dolby Atmos support, and are good for bigger heads, but there are some odd button and software choices that I think hold them back from greatness. —Brad Bourque


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