Experience the Ultimate Sound of Turtle Beach’s Atlas Air Headphones – Comfort Meets Acoustic Excellence
You might be surprised to learn that while I lovea good gaming headset , I almost never wear one unless I absolutely must — I prefer to listen to everythingover speakers instead. Headsets, especially gaming headsets, are designed to fully immerse you in your own little pocket of pure, isolated sound, and it’s a little too isolated for me — I’m easily distracted and it’s just too much sound. Or, maybe, too focused.
What I do like, however, are open-back headsets, which have wider, more open soundstages and offer immersion without the isolation. There are several open-back gaming headsets on the market, but almost all are wired. Enter Turtle Beach’s newest premium headset and the first wireless open-back gaming headset, the Atlas Air. The Atlas Air is a lightweight, airy open-back wireless headset with 40mm dynamicdrivers and support for 24-bitaudio . It offers 2.4GHz wireless, Bluetooth 5.2, and wired connectivity, and it comes with a detachable flip-to-mute boom mic. It’s the kind of headset I could wear forever… if it didn’t suffer from a serious software problem. And software is kind of a big deal for a wireless headset.
The Atlas Air is a wireless, over-ear, open-back gaming headset with a detachable flip-to-mute boom mic. It has a lightweight gray plastic frame with shiny gray speaker plates on its large, round floating earcups (we’ll get to the “floating” part in a moment). It comes with a black mesh and elastic suspension headband and black fabric-covered earpads, but Turtle Beach sells brightly-colored “mod packs,” consisting of a replacement headband strap and earpads, for $25. Turtle Beach is printed in silver above each earcup, and its palm tree logo is embossed in silver on each side of the strap, where it attaches to the headband.
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The Atlas Air is well-named — it’s incredibly lightweight at just 10.61 ounces (301g) with the microphone installed (10.32oz / 292.5g without the mic). It’s not the absolute lightest gaming headset on the market, but it’s pretty close — and combined with its mesh suspension headband, it really felt like I was wearing nothing on my head.
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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
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The headband uses a combination of mesh and an adjustable elastic strap to “float” away from your head. The mesh wraps around the plastic frame to hold the elastic strap in place, and the elastic strap is anchored to each side, fastened to the inside of the frame with Velcro. You can adjust the headband by adjusting the strap to make it tighter or looser. It’s not particularly precise, but there’s a lot of leeway because the elastic is stretchy and the frame is pretty flexible. The inside of the headband measures 12.5 inches (317.5mm), and the strap is the only means of adjustment — the earcups don’t move or extend like they do in other headsets. While I found the Atlas Air to be very comfortable, my husband, who has a bigger head than I do, didn’t like the way the elastic strap pressed down on his head, even after he adjusted it to be much looser.
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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
The earcups are also “floating,” in that they’re attached to the frame with rubber bungees, sort of like what you see on a microphone shock mount. This allows for a decent amount of movement in all directions, so the Atlas Air adapts to different head shapes pretty easily. The earcups have soft, memory foam padded earpads, covered in a shiny, athletic weave fabric. The padding is thick but very soft, and shouldn’t be a problem even for people wearing glasses. The fabric is fine — my ears didn’t get hot, but they don’t usually get hot (they didn’t feel particularly cool, either), and I wasn’t too concerned about passive noise cancellation as this is an open-back headset. The fabric does look a little cheap, however.
Actually, the whole headset looks a little cheap. I realize this is partly the sacrifice you make for a headset that’s so lightweight — the 8.3 ounce (235g)SteelSeries Arctis Nova 1 is also made of plastic, elastic, and mesh — but the Atlas Air_is_ still a $180 headset. The thin, ultra-flexible plastic headband doesn’t feel particularly flimsy — in fact, it feels fairly sturdy for what it is — but it doesn’t feel like a headset you could easily toss into a bag (the earcups don’t swivel and it’s an open-back headset, so it’s not too travel-friendly anyway). TheHyperX Cloud III Wireless , which is also incredibly comfortable and retails for $10 less than the Atlas Air, has a full metal frame and weighs 11.64 ounces (330g) without its mic installed — about 1.3 ounces (37.5g) heavier than the Atlas Air.
The Atlas Air is more than just its looks and weight, of course, but just know that it’s not a particularly premium-looking headset. Even the tonal color scheme isn’t working for me — the entire frame is a generic dark gray plastic, save for the shiny (but still plastic) speaker plates, and the black accents aren’t enough to give it that premium boost. I do like the bold, vibrant colors of the mod packs, which come in royal purple, “rebel pink,” and “bermuda blue,” but adding color won’t make the headset look more premium (just more colorful). Plus, it feels like Turtle Beach could’ve included an extra set of earpads in the box — perhaps in an alternate color.
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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
The left earcup houses the headset’s buttons, ports, and controls. There are three buttons: power, input switch (for quickly switching between 2.4GHz wireless and Bluetooth), and a multi-function button (tap to play/pause, double-tap to skip forward, triple-tap to skip backward, and hold to enter Bluetooth pairing mode). The speaker plate on the left earcup twists to control volume, and the headset comes with a 3.5mm audio cable with a volume wheel. There are also three ports on the left earcup: a USB-C port for charging, a 3.5mm jack for a wired connection, and a 2.5mm port for connecting the headset’s detachable boom mic. Once the mic is attached you can flip it up to mute it, so there’s no mute button on the headset.
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The Atlas Air comes with two cables — a 6-foot (1.8m) braided USB-C to USB-A charging cable, and a 6-foot (1.8m) braided 3.5mm audio cable with inline volume controls. It also comes with a detachable boom mic and a foam pop filter, a 2.4GHz wireless USB-A dongle, and a soft cloth drawstring carrying pouch.