Feb 23, 2016 05:02 PM
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A couple of basic outline decisions turn the G35 from a plain, matte dark headset into a well-made, instinctive gadget. The left ear container holds a modest bunch of physical controls that are both less demanding to get to and more insightfully laid-out than most in-line link remotes. The back plate of the ear container holds a Mic Mute catch, a vast volume wheel, and three adaptable catches that can control media playback, amplifier volume, and even voice changing through Logitech's G35 programming. On the right half of the ear glass, a slider switch flips Dolby Digital handling. The left half of the ear glass holds the mic on a flip-down arm that can conceal it when not being used, and a red light on the mic demonstrates whether it's quieted or not. These are fundamental touches, however they make the G35 a great deal more advantageous to use than most different headsets
The G35 offers generally very good sound, but like many other gaming headsets, suffers from mediocre clarity in bass.
The surround sound it boasts is ineffectual and, while it sounds very good in general, bass is lacking. The main benefit to the headset is its great design, with the controls and flip-down mic. Hopefully Logitech will continue this trend with the next series of gaming headsets and add some much-needed low end. To get the clever design and more convenience, check out the similar-but-wireless