JBL Quantum 360X Wireless Gaming Headset Review

<p>A couple of years ago, JBL launched the Quantum 350, a budget wireless entry into their over-stuffed and apparently quite successful gaming headset family.</p> <p>It came out for $99 and had pretty solid features all around for that price point. I liked it in&nbsp;<a href="https://xander51.medium.com/jbl-quantum-350-wireless-gaming-headset-review-f4c3da941dca" rel="noopener">my original review</a>, and months later after noticing a weird silence around and apparent lack of interest in it, I nominated it one of&nbsp;<a href="https://xander51.medium.com/the-best-wireless-gaming-headset-youre-missing-out-on-b6cb67bcab8e" rel="noopener">the best wireless headsets you likely missed out on</a>.</p> <p>Earlier this year, JBL gave it a small console-focused upgrade with the new 360 models. These sell for $129 normally (<a href="https://www.jbl.com/gaming-headsets/QUANTUM360XWIRELESS.html?dwvar_QUANTUM360XWIRELESS_color=Black-AM-Current" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">official site here</a>) but I see them go on discount all the time. It&rsquo;s available in both an Xbox-focused &ldquo;X&rdquo; model and a PS5-targeted &ldquo;P&rdquo; model, but one of them is a clear winner if you don&rsquo;t mind the green and black color scheme. The X model, which I bought myself at retail, has a dual-mode receiver that will work on all consoles and PC and yet costs no more than the PS5 version, so definitely go for the Xbox version if you care about having the most features. Pleasantly, the dongle will attempt to automatically change between its Xbox and non-Xbox modes depending on what you plug it into, but you can also manually toggle back and forth with a button on the side.</p> <p><a href="https://xander51.medium.com/jbl-quantum-360x-wireless-gaming-headset-review-29f2cb9eeb72"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>
Tags: Headset Review