Despite coming in at a premium tier, there are no gaudy RGB elements or wireless capabilities to speak of. With a design that hearkens back to premium studio headphones, the Logitech G Pro X clearly showcases simplicity over complexity. This is where the Logitech G Pro X differs from the rest.
Gaming headsets nowadays emphasise RGB lighting and all kinds of feature sets without actually focusing on great sound. This much is evident in the incredibly popular Razer Kraken X, which looks nice and sits comfortably but sounds atrocious. It is no secret how gaming headsets are designed to look great, more so than actually sounding good. The Logitech G Pro X is a beautifully premium headset that feels great, sounds phenomenal and finally upgrades the baked in headset microphone to something decent. You know, the cool-looking ones before up-and-coming trap artists and “rockers” started swearing by the highly overrated Beats by Dre. The company’s most-expensive and highest-tier product, features an entirely new design that hearkens back to studio-quality headsets of old. Unlike some of Logitech’s newer headsets designs, the Logitech G Pro X sees the company tip their toes into “professional” and “retro” designs. However, the Logitech G Pro X is a phenomenal return to form, and may possibly be one of the best headsets I have tested. This is why a headset like the now-discontinued Logitech G433 is still one of my all-time favourites (and my daily driver). While there is no denying that sporty and “futuristic” designs are very much for gamers, I prefer the company’s random stints into simpler designs. For the longest time, Logitech G’s premium headsets usually conformed to “gamey” designs – a stark contrast from the company’s usual function-over-form design language.