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Help solve audio confusion...

looper

Golden Member
Son and I are PC gamers. We would like to improve our in-game sound quality. Here are the sound components we have...

M-Audio AV 40 speakers(pair)
NuForce Icon 2 DAC(for music)
inexpensive Logitech headset for chat in TeamSpeak(VOIP) with clan mates in game(USB)
Creative Labs X-Fi internal sound card (no longer installed)
Grado SR 80 headphones for music, connected to front of DAC

Questions:

*We want to get a very good headset for gaming, but it cannot be connected to the DAC,
as the headphone connector there is only output. So, should I re-install the Creative
X-Fi card and purchase a very good headset, such as the Seenheiser 360, which will then connect to that?
*Or, just get a high-end headset that is USB?

I want the best sound that we can set up...

Thanks for any input, and please forgive my nobbishness...
 
I do not like USB, although the convenience is there I don't like the added CPU cycles being used plus I've heard some bad quality models.
 
Sub the POS Nuforce for something like an Asus Xonar U3 (which will, yes really, be better), which will improve your non-headset audio (or even headsets, since it supports Dolby Headphone).

I'm partial to the Logitech G35 as a gaming headset. Not everyone likes the comfort or that fact that it's closed. Personally I find the comfort perfectly tolerable after cushion adjustments, and I like that fact that it's closed. Sound is comparable with closed phones in similar discounted price range, and you get more control - as well as Dolby headphone and a 'sharp'-sounding (which is a good thing in games, not so much in Skype) but decent-pickup mic.

If you want the best within reason, there's the Beyerdynamic MMX 300. It's typically $300, and since it's based on that particular headphone many say "well why do I pay $100 extra over a DT 770 Premium for a mic" and it's not that simple: You get a pretty decent USB adapter with onboard controls, a mic that blows away any other consumer headset mic I've heard (let alone the POS Zalman clip-ons), a $20 bag and a 5-year warranty.
 
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