Creative Sound Blaster EVO Zx review

Looks the part, and sounds pretty good

Creative Sound Blaster EVO Zx review
The Creative Sound Blaster EVO Zx looks the part, and sounds pretty good

TechRadar Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Good looking

  • +

    Solidly built

  • +

    Folding design

  • +

    Bluetooth and NFC

  • +

    Unobtrusive microphone

Cons

  • -

    Expensive

  • -

    Not the best sound quality

  • -

    Needs USB or headphone jack

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The Creative Sound Blaster brand has been carrying weight in the computer audio world for many years, though some recent releases have been poorly received, diminishing the name somewhat. Can the Creative Sound Blaster EVO Zx headset restore the Sound Blaster reputation?

In some ways, the Creative Sound Blaster EVO Zx is a bit of an odd proposition. There's no denying that it looks the part, with a stylish folding design in the red and black hues of the Creative Sound Blaster Tactic3D Rage.

Verdict

With a £199.99 / US$249.99 / AU$279.95 asking price, the Creative Sound Blaster EVO Zx is an expensive headset. There's some genuinely good technology in these cans, and it's great to see some more NFC-sporting bits of kit. If you use these headphones with a desktop PC, however, you won't get much out of most of this tech, especially if you have a fancy sound card - since the SB AXX1 chip bypasses any sound cards.

You're then left with a well-built pair of headphones that offer good, but not superb, sound quality. Later this year Creative will release the Creative Sound Blaster EVO ZxR, with larger 50mm drivers in each can, compared to the EVO Zx's 40mm. We'll have to wait to see if the increase in driver size - and jump in price - results in a boost in quality.

First reviewed 19 August 2013

Matt Hanson
Managing Editor, Core Tech

Matt is TechRadar's Managing Editor for Core Tech, looking after computing and mobile technology. Having written for a number of publications such as PC Plus, PC Format, T3 and Linux Format, there's no aspect of technology that Matt isn't passionate about, especially computing and PC gaming. He’s personally reviewed and used most of the laptops in our best laptops guide - and since joining TechRadar in 2014, he's reviewed over 250 laptops and computing accessories personally.