Please help me choose new PC gaming headphones!

SergeantC4

Commendable
Jun 13, 2016
3
0
1,510
Hello everyone reading this! This is my first post so sorry if it's not laid out the best or if I ramble on. I am also not very techy so please try to dumb it down a bit for me. :p

But I am looking for new PC gaming headphones since my old turtle beach tangos are pretty worn out. I have done quite a bit of research and I'm still pretty stumped on what I should get for a headset/ headphones. I am primarily a FPS gamer, CoD 4 remastered when that comes out (because no one wants infinite warfare) CS:GO, and the likes.

Edit:

Ok after doing some more research I have narrowed it down to 2 headphones..
Either sennheiser hd 598, or audio technica ath-ad700x.
I'm leaning more toward the audio technica..

Now I have a few questions about these.
I'm pretty sure neither have "surround sound" as in like what astros or turtle beach would have.

Q #1: Will I get positional sound from either of these? IE foot steps, grenades/ pins pulled, gun shots etc.
Q #2: Which of these do you think would fit me better/ would you rather own.
Q #3: Is it comfortable for hours of use at a time?
**Q #4: Do I need a sound card or dac/amp?
Q #5: Is there a better alternative?

**If a dac/amp is better and needed, would the schiit (lol) fulla work fine?

For alternative headphones price really isn't an issue as long as I don't go over ~$300 US (my wife would kill me).

Thank you to anyone reading this and replying trying to help me!
 
Solution
1- the ad500x/ad700x are widely respected for their vast soundstage and good positional audio. they are really quite good for things like fps gaming. the hd518/558/598 fall into the better than average category. more than good enough, but not quite excelling.

2. depends on what you expect sound signature wise. both are good in their own right but what fits you may vary. i'll cover this after.

3A. if you like the headband the ad500x/700x do have comfortable earcups. the headband is a love or hate scenario. if you like it you'll think they are comfortable while if you hate it you might dislike the headphones because of it. hard to say which unless you try it. hd hd518/558/598 lineup is in the average to better than average category...
1- the ad500x/ad700x are widely respected for their vast soundstage and good positional audio. they are really quite good for things like fps gaming. the hd518/558/598 fall into the better than average category. more than good enough, but not quite excelling.

2. depends on what you expect sound signature wise. both are good in their own right but what fits you may vary. i'll cover this after.

3A. if you like the headband the ad500x/700x do have comfortable earcups. the headband is a love or hate scenario. if you like it you'll think they are comfortable while if you hate it you might dislike the headphones because of it. hard to say which unless you try it. hd hd518/558/598 lineup is in the average to better than average category.

3B. second part to this is sonic signature. the hd*** series is really laid back and not quite as detailed nor bright on treble so its a good easy listening headphone for hours on end. while it might be a bit less exciting than some cans it depends on what you're looking for. some people love the mellowness. the ad*** series is more treble/mid focused and is brighter and more detailed all around. while this can be good for the added detail and vibrancy in those ranges, some people can get fatigued by treble.

4. for the cans listed above, not normally unless your onboard is extremely poor or if you want support for virtual yet lack it. for some other choices (below) you might need an amp or soundcard.

5. i'm getting to that..

schiit fulla... you may laugh at the name but schiit is an extremely well respected company. the fulla might work for some easier to drive headphones but for those a soundcard may be the better option or the fiio e10k. for larger cans, its worth looking at the schiit magni+modi, or just the magni, the audioengine d1 or possible the o2 amp + odac. it really depends on what headphones you get. for the ones above, they are easy to drive.

$300 total counting amplifier or soundcard?

as for alternatives or what is best for you.. that depends on what kind of sound signature you want and what properties you want in a headphone.

-sound signature?

treb/mid focus - good for picking up details in fps games and not having things like footsteps covered up by bass. may sound a bit anemic to bassheads and are a bit less fun sounding due to lack of bass for some. (ad500x/ad700x)

flat/neutral - good for general use and more faithful reproduction of sound. lack of heavy bass which can cover up things like footsteps so good for gaming but not at the level of bass light cans. enough treble energy but not to the level of treb/mid focused cans. some may find flat cans boring. (hd518/558/598)

v-shaped - more bass and treble with recessed mids. good treble energy for picking up small details while having bass for things like explosions. generally considered one of the most fun to listen to sound profiles by many. bass may cover up some treble like light footsteps so they are not as advantageous in fps gaming but certainly can be used if you want a can that is both exciting and decent for gaming.

bass heavy - bass cannons in other words. generally bloated and extreme bass levels which means less treble and early mid levels. tend to be a little distorted sounding due to bass focus. good for bass heavy music or bassheads.

open vs closed?

generally open is considered the most ideal for gaming due to wider soundstages (depth or distance from center point to where sound appear to come from when listening) but leak sound in and out. they tend to be lacking in bass or at the least not bassy. closed cans lack a large soundstage generally but do isolate you from noise in and out and tend to have the capability of more bass (capability to.. this does not mean closed always means more bass). these are just relative and of course there are exceptions to this rule

other options?

if you want something in treb/mid focused realm some cans from akg would be good. k701/k702/q701/k7xx. they tend to be power hungry so you would need a good headphone amp like the magnii. they tend to be picky about sources.. on good quality equipment they will sound GREAT but they will really pick apart things like poor quality audio files, bad radio streams or crappy equipment. the closed version of the ad500x/ad700x (a500x/a700x) are okay if you need closed cans but the open variants are better due to soundstage.

if you want something neutral, the dt880 from beyerdynamics perhaps. lacks the bass of the dt770 closed cans and doesnt quite have the treble brightness the dt990 has making it a little more flat and neutral than those two. a good choice under $200. i would highly suggest an amplifier but you might be able to get by with a creative z.

if you want something v shaped, the dt990 is an excellent value can. very bright crisp treble and for open cans surprisingly good bass output. well known comfort (just like the dt770/dt880). i would suggest an amplifier. the dt770 is a closed can with a more bassy sound but works well for people who want something with a bigger than average soundstage for closed cans. the fidelo x2 also falls into this category and if you want something with a bit less treble energy than a dt990 and a bit less quantity of bass but somewhat deeper frequency response they might be worth looking at.

also of note for headsets. most are rubbish but a few are based on actual headphone designs. those i know of are listed below. generally it makes sense to go with the headphone variant instead (normally cheaper) but some people absolutely want an all in one..

beyerdynamics mmx300 is basically an overpriced not quite as bassy older variant of the dt770 premium.
sennheiser game one is basically a hd518/hd518. prices last i looked were fairly comparable.
sennheiser game zero is similar to the pc363d, pc350se, hd555 and hd595
audiotechnica ad1x is basically an overpriced ad500x/700x. ag1x is the a500x/a700x
hyper x cloud is based on the takstar pro 80 headphone
 
Solution

SergeantC4

Commendable
Jun 13, 2016
3
0
1,510
Thank you very much for the reply! From what I gathered from that the audio technica ath- ad700x seems like the headphones I'm going to go with.
Now I just have 2 more questions.
(These may seem dumb or trivial but I am extremely new to pc gaming and headphones in general.)

But it sounds like I don't NEED a dac/amp but they help right?
And I'm pretty sure the headphones don't have control over both voice chat and game volume separately. So would I benefit from something like an audio mixer?
And would a audio mixer allow me to do that with the audio technicas?

This is a mixer I found that seems like it would (possibly) work.

Behringer XENYX 502 Stereo Mixer

Sorry for all the questions I'm very new at this!
Thank you very much for all your help and time!
 
the ad700x normally does not normally need a soundcard or dac+amp. most people should be fine with onboard. this does not mean that all onboard is created equal however - you may or may not want/need a soundcard but you should be able to test first and decide later.

the ad700x is a headphone not a headset (no microphone) so it stands to reason that they wouldnt have a mixer built in. you can adjust different program volume levels using the windows volume mixer though. quite frankly i would consider anything that allowed you to adjust them independently on the headset itself to be a rarity.

audio mixers generally mix two analog sources. this would be great for things like mixing audio from pc and console at the same time.. but not for using just the pc as getting them output as separate streams is not simple. it can be done (with things like virtualaudiocable and multiple ports) but its much simpler to just use the software mixer in windows.

as for virtual surround sound, all headphones are stereo. you can add virtual surround with razers free software or by using dolby headphone or sbx/cmss3d which may come with your onboard (if it doesnt, getting a soundcard can add the function). some people like it, some people dont. in fact, with the ad700x you may not even want it. keep in mind that CS-GO has terrible audio so honestly there is only so much you can do.