Moondrop SSR Review (2) – Shouting At The Moon
This review is a shout out to the werewolves who howl at the moon.
Read moreThis review is a shout out to the werewolves who howl at the moon.
Read moreSome technical photography showing the physical features of the Moondrop SSP earphone prior to my full review.
Read moreQuasi-diffuse-field-neutral tuned earphone that sonically excel by their non-sterile/non over-analytical balanced and fluid signature mainly fuelled by an outstanding dry and articulate, well-dosed low-end.
Read moreUncommented technical photos, frequency response graphs, and early impressions of the Moondrop SSR.
Read moreThe Moondrop Spaceship are a well-designed, well-built, brightish and clean sounding earphone with a great timbre. Rewarding for people who can stomach a bit of upper midrange.
Read moreThe excellent Starfield is another piece in Moondrop’s puzzle of becoming a recognized brand beyond Chi-Fi.
Read moreThe Starfield is a mid-price single-dynamic-driver earphone from Chengdu, Sichuan, China, that retails at $109.
Read moreOverall, I like the MKP more than my colleagues did—they show a mature, non-fatiguing signature which should appeal to most.
Read moreThe Moondrop Crescent is a sturdily built, (Harman Target) neutral tuned single dynamic-driver earphone with a warm, full, homogeneous, organic sound that rivals its Kanas Pro sibling at 1/6 of the price.
Read moreThe Moondrop Kanas Pro is a well-built, single dynamic driver earphone aiming to follow the Harman Target curve. It has a warm, overly strong very-low end fighting against recessed neutral mids and treble…this hostile interaction throws the tonality out of balance and becomes quickly fatiguing to my ears.
Read moreSome photos of the Moondrop Crescent, the smaller sibling of the popular Moondrop Kanas Pro.
Read moreThese are solidly constructed and very pretty to look at if you like shiny silver things.
Read moreThis is a series of photos of the Moondrop Kanas Pro ahead of our THREE reviews of the iem.
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