"SteelSeries finally helped me retire my battered 2015 Astro A50": This is the multiplatform headset, perfected
SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Omni photographs
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Headset ascending.

SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Omni photographs
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Headset ascending.

Sleek gaming headphones in green and purple hues sit on a dark desk, surrounded by a glowing RGB keyboard and a smartphone, creating a vibrant tech ambiance.
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Stylish and functional headset for gaming and music

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The headphone has become something it was never originally designed to be: a silhouette. Worn around the neck on a subway platform or draped over a chair at a coffee shop, a great pair of over-ears communicates taste in much the same way a watch or a well-chosen bag does. The best ones are now designed with that resting moment in mind, not as an afterthought, but as a deliberate part of the brief.
What separates a good headphone from a great one is increasingly less about frequency response and more about how the object behaves when it’s not in use. The five pairs on this list earn their place on both counts. Worn on the head, they deliver. Worn around the neck, they still look like they were built by people who thought carefully about that exact resting moment, collarbone and all.
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Most headphones achieve lightness by sacrificing material quality somewhere along the way. StillFrame achieves it by rethinking the entire structure from scratch. At 103 grams, it sits on your head with the kind of effortless presence most pairs spend an entire product page trying to claim. The ultra-minimal design, clean lines, no exposed hardware, and no decorative flourish anywhere on the frame is the kind of restraint that reads as confidence rather than budget constraint.
Around the neck, StillFrame does what minimal design always promises and rarely delivers: it disappears into your outfit rather than competing with it. The 24-hour battery means you’ll reach for these in the early morning and still have charge well into the evening without thinking about a cable. For anyone who wants headphones that age well, that look as right in three years as they do today, this is where the search ends.
Click Here to Buy Now: $245.00
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Romanian audio atelier Meze has spent two decades treating headphones as craft objects, and the Strada makes that philosophy fully explicit. Hand-carved walnut and ebony ear cups, each unique in grain and tone, sit alongside a magnetic ear pad system that snaps on and off cleanly, making them the first pair that genuinely anticipates its own aging. The leather headband drapes naturally against the collarbone. At $799, you’re investing in the idea that daily objects deserve this level of material care.
Worn around the neck, the Strada does something genuinely rare: it makes you look considered rather than plugged in. Those hand-carved wood cups catch light in a way that aluminum never quite manages, and the closed-back design delivers warmth and isolation without the clinical precision of most audiophile gear.
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Bang & Olufsen has been designing objects that make a room better simply by existing in it since 1925. The Beoplay H95 carries that logic to your ears. Brushed aluminum arcs support lambskin ear cushions with the quiet authority of something that was never trying to impress anyone. Custom 40mm titanium drivers deliver an expansive, unhurried soundstage, and 38 hours of battery life with ANC active means you rarely need to think about charging. At $1,250, it reads as inevitable rather than expensive.
Around the neck, the H95 makes its strongest case. The slim profile rests cleanly against the collarbone, the aluminum catches light without glare, and the lambskin ages into something better than what you started with. Vogue Scandinavia named it the headphone that pairs best with the softest cashmere roll-neck and a cocooning wool coat, which is not exactly a mid-range endorsement. The tactile control dial and hard carrying case complete the picture of a brand that hasn’t needed to shout for a century.
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The Px8 S2 looks like it was designed by someone who spent too much time around luxury automobiles and not enough time worrying about what people thought. Diamond-quilted Nappa leather ear cups sit inside angular aluminum driver housings that don’t apologize for taking up space. Bowers & Wilkins built their reputation on speaker cabinets in British living rooms, and that obsession with material quality is fully present in the Px8 S2. At $799, it’s the most visually assertive pair on this entire list.
Worn on the head, the 40mm Carbon Cone drivers deliver a focused sound that rewards careful listening. Worn around the neck, the quilted leather and aluminum geometry create a silhouette that reads closer to jewelry than consumer electronics.
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Sonos spent two decades being the most thoughtfully designed speaker company in the world before ever touching headphones. The Ace is what happens when a brand famous for restraint and material quality finally commits to an entirely new product category. Stainless steel arms, memory foam ear cushions, and a clean form in Midnight or White carry the same quiet authority as Sonos’s best home equipment. At $449, it sits below the B&O and B&W while fully matching them on design character and material coherence.
What makes the Ace genuinely stand out is what you don’t notice: no visible seams on the headband, no mismatched materials, no hardware that apologizes for itself. Active noise cancellation and a 30-hour battery complete a pair that wears as well around a neck as it sounds through the drivers, making it the most versatile pick on this list.
What all five of these pairs share is a seriousness of intent that goes well beyond frequency response. They were built by companies that think about how objects live in the world, not just during a listening session, but on a train platform, at a desk, hanging around a neck. That’s a harder problem to solve than noise cancellation, and the brands that crack it tend to stay relevant far longer than those that don’t.
The range here runs from $449 to $1,250, but the price gaps matter less than they appear at first. What you’re really choosing between is design language: Romanian craft warmth, Scandinavian restraint, British precision, speaker-first material thinking, or clean minimalism that genuinely disappears. Any of these pairs earns the right to hang around your neck. The question is which one earns it in a way that feels made for how you actually move through the world/
The post 5 Over-Ear Headphones That Look as Good When They’re Around Your Neck as When They’re on Your Head first appeared on Yanko Design.

Promotional image for the Turtle Beach Stealth Pro II wireless gaming headset
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The Turtle Beach Stealth Pro II is ready to succeed one of the most popular Xbox gaming headsets.

Turtle Beach Stealth 700 (Gen 3) headset review photographs
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Turtle Beach's Stealth 700 (Gen 3) gaming headset is back on sale for a 33% discount.

Image of the Razer BlackShark V2 Pro (2023).
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<p>The Razer BlackShark V2 Pro (2023) in front of its retail box, along with the detachable mic and two included, braided cables.</p>

Image of the Razer BlackShark V3 Pro wireless gaming headset.
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All the content you'll get with the Razer BlackShark V3 Pro.
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Philips is going all in with the retro vibe of 80s, because why not? The era was signified by bold colors and freedom of expression that somehow got lost in the craving for clean designs. The Dutch multinational wants to bring back that classic feel with its Moving Sound line-up that’ll have you drooling over. That pure magnetism of the retro-futuristic design sense, paired with the bright hues, is enough to get the party started.
The new range is a modern reinterpretation of the 1980’s Philips Moving Sound design, and on the inside, there is technology of modern times. This audio accessory lineup is headed by two portable Bluetooth speakers, a pair of headphones, and cheeky earbuds that are hard to resist. All of them come in attractive color combinations for a nostalgic feel. Most importantly, sustainability is at the core of the range, featuring replaceable batteries, extensive use of RCS-certified plastics, and FSC-certified plastic-free packaging.
Designer: Philips
Philips has brought two portable Bluetooth speakers to the fore, which overshadow any other option on the market for their bold retro feel. The €349.99 (approximately $402) Tube (MS80) speaker is a boxy option with the bright yellow hue contrasted well with the matte black and the LED lighting around the speaker ring. It is not all looks as the IP67 rated speaker produces 140W of thumping sound via the two five-inch woofers, two tweeters, and a dual passive radiator setup. The Tube (MS80) retains the nostalgia with a color display showing the looping cassette animation. The speaker has a 24-hour battery life, which will obviously depend on the volume levels at which it is played. Modern connectivity options like Bluetooth 5.5, Auracast, and USB make this a true audio lover’s accessory.
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On the other hand, The Roller (MS60), priced at €179.99 (approximately $208), is similar to the Tube (MS80) with a smaller footprint and more contoured look. The stereo layout comprises woofers, tweeters and passive radiators, and for low-end addicts, the bass can be tuned up using the Bass+ feature. The IP67 speaker generates 60W sound and comes with the same modern connectivity options as the big brother. Since it generates less wattage, it is also rated at 24-hour battery life. You can also utilize the speaker as a battery bank for power-hungry gadgets.
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These are one of my favorites in the lineup for their cheesy appeal. The IP54-rated Buds (MS3) wireless earbuds come with a round case that has a touchscreen display on top to show the current playing track and an option to toggle the next or previous tracks. The hues on this are purely magical with the yellow, teal and neon pink splattered in perfect proportions. The buds boast six microphones in total for hybrid ANC, and come with Spatial Audio, multipoint connectivity, Swift Pair support, and Auracast. The promised battery life of 42 hours with ANC off is quite impressive, and a 10-minute quick charge lasts for two hours. For €79.99 (approximately $92) The Buds (MS3) are an absolute steal.
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Philips was not going to miss out on the retro feel of on-ear headphones for this line-up. They have the telltale nostalgic look and feel, reminding me of the Back to the Future flick. They are lightweight and will take you back to the golden era if you pair them with music from the 80s. Audio quality from these is impressive courtesy of the 40mm drivers, and the promised 26 hours battery life should last you a couple of days of pure music bliss. You can connect them via Bluetooth or a wired connection, making them well-suited for daily driving. You won’t get anything better than the Ringo Duo (MS1) headphones priced at €34.99 (approximately $40).
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The post Philips Moving Sound line-up impresses with retro chunky form and peppy colors first appeared on Yanko Design.

Turtle Beach Stealth Pro
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The Turtle Beach Stealth Pro wireless headset for Xbox and PC has received one of the biggest discounts it's had in months.

Turtle Beach Stealth 700 (Gen 3) headset review photographs
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The Turtle Beach Stealth 700 (Gen 3) next to to its package box

A pair of large, black, over-ear headphones with a striped grille design rests on a blue surface.
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A pair of large, black, over-ear headphones with a striped grille design rests on a blue surface.

The Razer BlackShark V2 Pro being held in a hand in front of a colorful landscape scene. A graphic on the image says "Major Deal."
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Photograph of the LucidSound LS15X Wireless Gaming Headset
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SteelSeries Arctis Gamebuds
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Photograph of the Razer BlackShark V2 Pro headset.
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Photograph of the HyperX CloudX headset
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Razer Kraken V3 HyperSense gaming headset with RGB lighting resting on a desk beside a gaming keyboard, featured in a Windows Central Deals banner.
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Image of the Razer Kraken Kitty V3 Pro wireless gaming headset.
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Image of the Logitech G522 LIGHTSPEED wireless gaming headset.
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