Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Deals

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Marshall Woburn III drops to $499.99, a rare $100 discount on a big home speaker

Save $100 on the Marshall Woburn III, a big-room Bluetooth speaker with real knobs and multiple inputs

Add as a preferred source on Google
On Sale marshall
Best Buy

Most Bluetooth speakers are great until you ask them to do “living room” duty, and then they start sounding small, thin, or harsh when you turn them up. The Marshall Woburn III is built for the opposite problem: filling a space with sound that still feels controlled. It’s down to $499.99, saving you $100 off the $599.99 compared value. If you want one speaker you can use for music, movies, and casual listening without building a full component system, this deal lands in the sweet spot.

What you’re getting

Think of the Woburn III as a home speaker that happens to have Bluetooth, not a Bluetooth speaker pretending to be home audio. You get physical knobs for volume, bass, and treble, which makes it easy to adjust on the fly depending on what you’re listening to: more warmth for background playlists, more clarity for podcasts, or a little extra low end for party volume.

Connections are a big part of why this model stands out. Alongside wireless playback, it includes 3.5mm auxiliary, RCA, and HDMI inputs. That opens up a lot of simple setups: a turntable-friendly option (with the right supporting gear), a straightforward TV audio upgrade, or a “plug anything in” speaker for devices you don’t want to pair every time.

Why it’s worth it

This deal is most useful for people who want fewer boxes and fewer decisions. Instead of a soundbar plus a separate music speaker (or a receiver setup), the Woburn III can act as the centerpiece for the room. The HDMI input is a truly underrated feature here because if you’re using it with a TV, it’s a cleaner daily experience than constantly reconnecting Bluetooth.

The other win is usability. The tactile controls make it feel like a piece of equipment you interact with, not an app you troubleshoot. That matters when you just want to hit play, tweak the sound, and move on with your night.

The bottom line

At $499.99, the Marshall Woburn III is a really good value if you want one premium home speaker that can handle music and TV audio, with easy physical controls and flexible inputs. If you’re chasing true surround sound or whole-home multiroom features, you’ll want a different route. But for a simple, big-sound centerpiece speaker, this discount makes it a great time to buy.

Omair Khaliq Sultan
I'm a writer, entrepreneur, and powerlifting coach. I’ve been building computers and fiddling with PC parts since I was a…
DJI Osmo Pocket 4 takes aim at low-light video and fast action
The new model combines a 1-inch sensor, 4K slow motion, and updated controls in a compact body
Camera, Electronics, Video Camera

DJI has unveiled the Osmo Pocket 4 with a familiar goal, better video from a camera small enough to carry anywhere. The standout upgrade is a 1-inch CMOS sensor, which should help it hold onto more detail in dim scenes while also giving fast-moving footage a cleaner look.

DJI also says the Osmo Pocket 4 can shoot 4K video at up to 240fps, while adding 14 stops of dynamic range and 10-bit D-Log support. That gives solo shooters a stronger mix of slow motion, highlight control, and grading headroom without moving up to a much larger setup.

Read more
Amazon reveals slimmest Fire TV Stick HD that no longer needs a wall adapter
Amazon made its best budget streaming stick even better at $35.
amazon-fire-tv-stick-hd

Amazon just refreshed one of its most popular streaming devices. The new Fire TV Stick HD is officially here, and it is the slimmest Fire TV device Amazon has ever made. At $34.99, it is available for preorder right now and ships April 29.

What's new with the Fire TV Stick HD and how is it different?

Read more
These camera-equipped earbuds offer a wild glimpse at the future of AirPods
These experimental earbuds show how AirPods could get a lot smarter
A team of researchers at Washington University built VueBuds TWS with a built-in camera

Wireless earbuds have already become the default wearable for a lot of people. This is why this new research feels more interesting than yet another smart glasses demo. Researchers at the University of Washington have developed VueBuds, a prototype system that adds tiny cameras to off-the-shelf wireless earbuds so users can ask an AI model about whatever is in front of them.

How does this work?

Read more