Tech

Turtle Beach Stealth Pro II review: my son Harri’s verdict after weeks of non-stop gaming

I’ll be honest, I’m not the one clocking hours in Far Cry or Fortnite of an evening for this review of the Turtle Beach Stealth Pro II. That job belongs to my son Harri. He’s 14, he’s obsessed (perhaps a little too much) with a range of games, and since the Turtle Beach Stealth Pro II landed in our house he hasn’t taken it off. So rather than me pretending to have gamer credentials I don’t have, this review comes from the bloke actually wearing it every single night.

Turtle Beach’s flagship headset launched in Australia at $549.95, through JB Hi-Fi, The Gamesmen and more places across Australia.. That’s a serious outlay for a gaming headset, so the real question is whether it holds up to a teenager’s relentless use, not just a polite week with a review unit.

Sound

Harri’s pitch is simple: the sound genuinely changes how you play. In his words, it “levels up how you play” by letting you hear every sound around you, which helps you know exactly where every enemy is. That’s not just teenage hype either, it lines up with what’s actually under the hood. The Stealth Pro II runs on 60mm dual drivers with separate woofers and tweeters, and it’s Dolby Atmos powered for the sense of immersion Harri keeps going on about. Turtle Beach also build in a Superhuman Hearing mode, adjustable through the companion app, tuned specifically to bring footsteps and reloads to the front of the mix, which is probably why Harri reckons he can pinpoint enemies before he even sees them.

In my limited use I do think its a clean and detailed sound with a wide soundstage, more than capable outside of gaming for music too.

Microphone

Harri describes the mic as very clear and one directional, a 9mm floating design that isolates vibration so you’re not picking up extra handling noise, backed by Turtle Beach’s AI noise reduction to strip out background game audio and keep it just his voice. That tracks with Turtle Beach’s own specs, which list the same unidirectional 9mm floating mic with AI based noise reduction and beamforming built in.

Where Harri isn’t so keen is the flip to mute function. He says it’s “very fidgety” and makes it hard to speak when you’re constantly adjusting it mid-game. His bigger gripe is the mute tone itself. It’s loud enough that if you knock the mic mid-sentence, the chime plays right over the top of whatever you were saying, and your mates miss half of it. That’s a genuine annoyance in the middle of a fast squad call, and it’s a trade-off Turtle Beach have leaned on for years with flip to mute, always pairing it with an audible tone so you know your mic has gone silent. Sensible in theory, less sensible when the tone becomes the interruption.

Battery life and the swap system

Of everything Harri mentioned, the swappable battery is what he rates most highly. No more sitting there charging a headset mid-session with a cord hanging off your head. You just pop in the spare battery from the charging dock and keep playing. That dock plugs straight into your Xbox, PlayStation or PC and connects automatically, which Harri reckons is one of the smartest design calls Turtle Beach have made. Each of the two batteries is a rechargeable lithium polymer cell rated for up to 40 hours, so between the pair you’re looking at 80 hours of use before either one needs a proper charge, matching what Turtle Beach and retailers list for the Stealth Pro II.

For a household where this headset barely comes off, that’s the kind of practical feature that matters more than a number on a spec sheet. It’s less about bragging rights and more about never having to stop playing because the battery died.

The verdict

I’m not going to pretend I’ve got the runs on the board to rank this against every headset on the market, that’s not my job here. But when the actual 14 year old wearing these things every day since they arrived tells you the sound helps him win, the mic keeps him heard clearly, chime aside, and the battery swap means he never has to stop mid-match, that’s about as good a review as you’ll get. At 9.95 it’s a premium buy, but going on Harri’s verdict, Turtle Beach have built something that earns its place on a serious gamer’s head.

Web: Turtle Beach

Recent Posts

  • Reviews

REVIEW: The Ecovacs Ultramarine P1 robot pool cleaner – Making waves in pool cleaning technology

Many companies are diving into the robot pool cleaner market, but few come with the…

27 minutes ago
  • Tech

TV Backlighting Tech Is Confusing Buyers, Here’s What You Need To Know

I've become increasingly confused by TV backlight technology. So let me explain it, because if…

24 hours ago
  • Lifestyle

Kyle Sandilands Live: fans are already lining up, $99 at a time

Love him or hate him, and frankly it seems everyone is firmly in one camp…

1 day ago
  • Motoring

Speeding fines – A new survey reveals exactly why we don’t learn our lesson

A new survey commissioned by dash cam manufacturer Navman has revealed the major reasons why…

2 days ago
  • Tech

Australia’s Triple Zero Custodian slacking off on the simple task of public awareness

For my sins I've spent much of today listening to politicians grandstanding in a Senate…

2 days ago
  • Lifestyle

Ecovacs goes outdoors in Australia, robotics for the Lawn, Pool and Exterior Windows

Having dominated the Australian home for almost a decade now with robot vacuum cleaners Ecovacs…

2 days ago