KBEAR Believe Review (4) – Random Thoughts
It’s the epitome of what reviewers describe as having “good technicalities”, BUT…
Read moreIt’s the epitome of what reviewers describe as having “good technicalities”, BUT…
Read moreThe KBEar Believe doesn’t break any new grounds, rather it acts as a proof of concept.
Read moreBEAR WITH ME, ISN’T IT BARELY BELIEVABLE THAT THE BELIEVE IS BRIMMING WITH BERYLLIUM?
Read moreThe KBEAR Believe is a warm sounding earphone with a thick low end and a good resolution from the midrange into the well extended treble. It relies strongly on (neutral) amplification.
Read moreSome technical photography showing the physical features of the KBEAR Believe earphone prior to my full review.
Read moreThese would have considerable appeal to fans of vocal-oriented material or to the treble averse…
Read moreThe KBEAR Aurora features a beautiful shell, organic timbre and great tonality.
Read moreThe KBEAR TRI I3 is a big and smooth sounding, never fatiguing magnetic planar earphone that impresses by its gigantic soundstage and natural vocals reproduction. Needs lots of power to shine…
Read moreThe KBEAR TRI I3 is a big and smooth sounding, never fatiguing magnetic planar earphone that impresses by its gigantic soundstage and natural vocals reproduction. Needs lots of power to shine and falls a bit short of its technical abilities.
Read moreTRI is the premium brand of KBEAR. The TRI Starsea is a 2BA + 1DD set that comes with tuning switches for different sound signatures. Thorough review to follow.
Read moreYet another consumer-tuned $25 hybrid, the KBEAR KS2 will look and sound awfully familiar to owners of the KZ ZSR and its ilk.
Read moreThe KBEAR KS2 are quite alive, they have this jump factor…this live sound. They have lots of energy without being annoying or fatiguing on either end.
Read moreFor its $30 pricetag, the KBEAR KB04 boasts good value, and it is quite an all rounder, has above average technicalities and comes in a good build. What else do we want?
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