![]() ![]() The low-end comes on strong, but never overbearing, and it really shines with mids and highs. Sony’s Platinum Headset is a surprisingly balanced piece of kit. The metal, plastic and pleather coalesce into a comfortable – if a bit obtuse – pair of cans. That said, while the headphones work on mobile devices, they probably wouldn’t be the pair of cans you’d take to the gym or elsewhere and thus maybe the design won’t bother you as much as it did us. The oversized earcups and double band bridge give it a sort of monstrous quality, like they were designed for a giant’s head rather than regular people. On the debit side though, these are far from the most stylish-looking headphones we’ve ever worn. We found that we could wear the headphones for about two-hour increments before we had to take them off for a breather. If you’re looking for an exact number, the Platinum Headset weighs 318.2g.įinally, the earpads themselves are made from a comfortable pleather material that gets a bit warm after some use, but doesn’t have a terrible amount of clamping force either. The headphones fold up neatly, perfect if you need to take them with you, and are a medium weight – not too heavy, but not so light that they feel breakable, either. Beneath the top band is a rubber strap that cradles the top of the noggin, and then all the rest is plastic. The top band consists of two metal bars that offer a lot of rigidity and hold the headset firmly in place. The Platinum Wireless is an interesting mix of plastic, metal and rubber. Unfortunately Australia didn't catch a price break in the last few years, but could receive one during Black Friday and Cyber Monday. When it first came out, this headset was expensive ($159/£129/AU$259) but has since dropped to a much more reasonable $117 in the US and £114 in the UK. It's true that the Sony PlayStation Platinum Wireless Headset is getting a bit long in the tooth at this point (it was released back in 2017), but it remains one of the best headsets compatible with the PlayStation 4. Sony Playstation 4 Platinum Headset (Download) at Amazon for $199.90.In the world of SSDs where even the "slow" drives are fast, size matters more. The fact of the matter is, a 4TB SSD gives you way more options than a 1TB or 2TB SSD, because those capacities are so small that you're practically guaranteed to require a second drive. 4TB is also usually more than enough storage to hold all of your apps and games although again, there are certainly exceptions. Of course there are people who do need far more than 4TB of storage, but nowadays more and more people are storing backups in the cloud. ![]() For under $200, you could effectively get away with a 4TB drive and do away with a second drive. The main reason is that high-capacity SSDs are simply too expensive to justify. If you buy a prebuilt PC, you'd see the same thing unless you're paying for a super high end rig, you'll rarely get more than 2TB of mixed storage. ![]() Usually DIY PC builders would get a smaller 1TB or 2TB capacity SSD as their primary boot drive and a large capacity traditional hard drive for their storage. This SSD doesn't quite meet the requirements Sony recommends for a PS5 storage upgrade (although it's very close and probably will work just fine), but it makes an excellent low-cost high-speed storage for your gaming PC. Amazon is offering the MSI Spatium M461 4TB PCIe Gen4 x4 M.2 SSD for only $179.99. ![]()
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