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Razer’s new Hammerhead V3 HyperSpeed earbuds rise above slow Bluetooth hassles

With a case that doubles as a wireless receiver and latency low enough for competitive play, the Hammerhead V3 HyperSpeed is built for gamers who switch devices and hate audio delays

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Razer Hammerhead V3 HyperSpeed featured image.
Razer

Razer just dropped the Hammerhead V3 HyperSpeed, gaming earbuds that keep Bluetooth connectivity as their backup plan rather than their primary mode of connection. 

The Hammerhead V3 HyperSpeed is built around one core proposition: your audio should never lag behind the gameplay (a common problem with regular wireless earbuds). To achieve that, the gaming earbuds rely on Razer’s HyperSpeed Wireless, a fancy term for a 2.4 GHz radio link.

Why does a 2.4 GHz connection actually matter for gaming?

Unlike a Bluetooth connection, the HyperSpeed Wireless can deliver ultra-low latency audio for times when in-game precision matters to you. Perhaps you have to track footsteps or react to directional calls in the least possible time, the 2.4 GHz HyperSpeed technology keeps the sound locked in sync with the on-screen action. 

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While Bluetooth struggled in crowded wireless environments, along with carrying noticeable latency, the HyperSpeed Wireless completely sidesteps that issue, claiming to provide a fast, stable, and interference-resistant audio playback. 

Apart from the low-latency wireless connectivity, the earbuds also ship with Razer’s SmartSwitch technology, which lets users switch between HyperSpeed Wireless and Bluetooth v6.0, which could come in handy while you’re jumping from your gaming PC to your phone. 

What else makes the V3 HyperSpeed worth considering?

The HyperSpeed case doubles as a wireless receiver. All you have to do is insert the compact dongle, and the case itself becomes the 2.4 GHz hub. You can also plug it into a PC via USB-C, allowing you to play and charge simultaneously.

Gamers can use the new Hammerhead V3 earbuds with various devices, including PCs, the PlayStation 5, Steam Deck, Nintendo Switch, and their own smartphone. 

Additional features include up to 50% improved active noise cancellation, THX Spatial Audio on PC for a virtual 7.1 soundstage through Razer Synapse 4, and total battery life reaches 40 hours (10 hours on earbuds and 30 hours from the case). 

With all the fancy wireless transmission shenanigans, the Hammerheard V3 HyperSpeed costs $129.99. There’s a slightly budget-friendly sibling of the device as well — the Hammerhead V3 X HyperSpeed — which costs $99.99. 

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
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