Home GADGETS BlueAnt Soundblade Review: Pretty and loud

BlueAnt Soundblade Review: Pretty and loud

BlueAnt Soundblade Review: Pretty and loud

Soundbars are usually aimed at home entertainment systems — not PCs, which is why we don’t typically review them. But not everyone has the desk space for a pair of desktop PC speakers (let alone something like a 5.1 surround system), and so a soundbar that sits nicely under your monitor actually makes a lot of sense – assuming it fits under your monitor, of course. 

And the BlueAnt Soundblade, at just 2.13 inches high, is designed to do just that. This under-monitor soundbar has a low, flat profile designed to sit over your monitor stand and wow all your friends/colleagues/family members with its sleek, sexy premium looks. It’s a 2.1 soundbar with two full-range drivers and an 80mm down-firing subwoofer, and three input options (USB-C, Bluetooth, AUX). And it gets very, very (seriously, it’s kind of shocking) loud. It also looks good — it has a fairly attractive faux brushed-metal finish and it comes in several colors (gray, white, light pink, light blue, and light green), and is otherwise just kind of pretty to look at. But are looks and loudness alone worth the $200 retail price?

Design of the Soundblade 

The Soundblade is a slim, flat, stylish under-monitor 2.1 soundbar designed to sit over — not under — your monitor stand. It features a textured plastic top that looks a little like brushed aluminum from afar (but definitely looks and feels like plastic from close up), fabric-covered forward-facing stereo drivers, and an 80mm down-firing center subwoofer. It comes in five colors that look like they’re designed to match a Samsung Smart Monitor or an Apple iMac: light blue, light green, light pink, white, or charcoal gray (the color of our review unit).

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The Soundblade doesn’t look like most soundbars. And, let’s face it: most soundbars look very, very similar, especially if they’re designed for the living room — long, boxy black rectangles with minimal controls, a logo-branded grille, and some sort of mounting hardware. Even soundbars that are aimed at PC users and gamers don’t deviate much from this generic design, except to add RGB lighting (a lot of RGB lighting).

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