Real Razer Seiren Elite Usb Digital Microphone Review

Tech Review: Razer Seiren Elite USB Digital Microphone: Groovy sound comes at a price

  • David Smith
  • March 12, 2018

Is there anything Razer can't practise? Any demographic of gamer for whom they can't adapt? One of the peripheral behemothic's latest pushes has been into the notwithstanding-quickly growing broadcaster market. People looking to become started on  Twitch are always in search of the right gear and Razer are set with an array of toys purpose-built for high quality live streaming. The Razer Seiren Elite microphone is one of the most recent additions to the hardware maker'southward growing stable of broadcast tools and is easily ane of its best.

After the success of their Seiren 10 microphone, Razer was conspicuously looking to upward the ante with a premium-tier version for those who accept their broadcast hardware seriously. The Seiren Aristocracy does everything you could possibly want in a streaming mic — there'due south audio pass through, there'south a carmine lite indicator to tell you when you're peaking (ie: being as well noisy), adjustable gain controls and a windshield to keep you from popping while speaking shut to the mic. It's got a great await, you can easily mountain it on a boom arm if you have one and it will fit right in with the myriad other pieces of hardware on your desk.

While larger than its cousin, the Seiren X, the Seiren Aristocracy is still quite compact and much easier to travel with than a larger competitor model like the Blueish Yeti. The mic'due south face features your Volume and Proceeds knobs and a mute button, while underneath hides a micro USB port for power and a headphone jack. The mic comes with a solid, weighty circular baseplate for your desk but tin can likewise be mounted on a boom arm or split up stand should your streaming ready differ.

I of the Seiren Elite's unique features is a High-Pass Filter switch on the base below the headphone jack. This feature is designed to filter out whatsoever errant low-end or low-frequency audio like the gasp of your aircon or bassy woof of your pet St Bernard from somewhere in the backyard. The mic also features built in digital/counterpart limiting to keep distortion out of the picture, and the free windscreen to keep you from popping off is prissy — yous ordinarily take to get those separately.

The downside? Information technology'due south $300 AUD. For the aspiring streamer, that'south a lot of money. For someone who'south relatively well-situated in the Twitch space, unless you lot're Ninja or NL_Kripp, that'southward still a lot of money. When competitor Blue Yeti is charging one-half the price and offering comparable features and sound quality, that's a point Razer badly demand to address.

In terms of sound quality, its quite hard to tell the Seiren Elite and the Bluish Yeti autonomously. They both audio great — the audio is clear and make clean. From what I could tell, the Bluish Yeti was the slightly louder of the ii — I constitute myself having to coax a chip more than gain out of the Seiren Aristocracy to get my levels right than I take on other mics. I honestly couldn't detect much difference between audio recorded with the high-laissez passer filter on and with it off. Information technology certainly wasn't enough to defeat the thudding of the 3 structure sites within two blocks of my flat (luckily my flat has its own built-in high-pass filter, our soundproofed balcony door). The high-pass filter did, nonetheless, come into its own when I deliberately started bumping and prodding the mic during a recording to see how it would react when accidentally knocked around.

So, in the end, where does this leave us? For now, I'grand nevertheless recommending the Blue Yeti. It's cheaper and more versatile with its cardioid, stereo, omnidirectional and bidirectional modes of use (for its part, the Seiren Elite is cardioid merely). That said, many of the Aristocracy's features like the high-pass filter, the peaking lite and windsheild are unique value adds in a mic that sits in this higher toll range. If what you're looking for is clean audio rather than an array of recording modes, then this is the mic yous want. I think Razer accept the scaffold for a mic that could have on the industry heavyweights here. I'll be very interested to see how the next few iterations of this hardware look and audio.

Score: 8.0 out of 10
Highlights: Great sound; Feature-rich; Free windshield!
Lowlights: Woah that's pricey; Not even trying to compete with Bluish Yeti
Manufacturer: Razer
Price: $299.95 AUD
Available: Now


Reviewed using a retail review unit provided by the manufacturer.

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This content has recently been ported from its original home on The Iris and may have formatting errors – images may non be showing upwardly, or duplicated, and galleries may non be working. Nosotros are slowly fixing these effect. If you spot whatever major malfunctions making information technology impossible to read the content, however, please let usa know at editor AT theaureview.com.

David Smith

David Smith is the quondam games and technology editor at The AU Review. He has previously written for PC World Australia. Yous can find him on Twitter at @RhunWords.

Tags: Microphones, Razer, Seiren Elite, Streaming Hardware

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Source: https://www.theaureview.com/technology/tech-review-razer-seiren-elite-usb-digital-microphone-great-sound-comes-at-a-price/

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