For years peripheral maker Razer has been pumping sound directly into our ears via gaming headsets. The Leviathan marks its first attempt at sharing that sound with the rest of the room, and a valiant first attempt at that.
Iāve seen plenty of premium speaker companies put out headsets, after all theyāre just tiny speakers (gross oversimplification alert!), but rarely have I seen a company thatās built a reputation for headsets make the transition to speakers. Acoustics are easier to master when only a single pair of ears is involved.
So itās daring of Razer, the mouse, keyboard, headset and incredibly skinny laptop maker, to branch out in this direction, especially when the branch is a $200 black bar that makes noise. There are quite a lot of those on the market, in case you hadnāt noticed. Theyāre kind of a thing now.
Razerās got its name going for it, having built up a reputation for quality audio devices, but the difference between headsets and full-room speakers is the difference between making a nice dinner for your friends and running a restaurant.
Letās see whatās on the menu.
What It Is
The Razer Leviathan is a smallish 5.1 surround sound bar that comes packaged with a keyboard key-shaped downward facing subwoofer. The bar itself is only around four inches high, making it as unobtrusive in front of a PC monitor as it is on a television stand.
(Note: if you buy one of these and it looks like the picture above, youāve broken it.)
Providing surround sound for gaming is one of its primary tasks, with both optical audio standard 3.5ā³ audio jack inputs to handle modern game consoles and PCs. Itās also got support for Bluetooth v 4.0 aptX however, making it the perfect companion for a phone packed with tunes or, if youāre feeling saucy, filling the room with the sounds of Angry Birds.
What I Did With It
When the Leviathan first arrived I was in the living room, so thatās where it went first, cruelly condemned to playing through an endless army of Caillou episodes. Every now and then Iād get to play some Titanfall or Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare or watch a television show that wasnāt annoying to everyone but three-year-olds. Sometimes weād watch Peg + Cat.
That happy experiment over, I moved the Leviathan into the spot Iād originally envisioned it in: in front of my computer monitor, where it fit quite nicely without obscuring the screen. The unit comes with two pairs of feet to adjust tilt angle, for the PC they recommend the highest, so the sound hits you right in the face.
The picture above is not my desk, but itās a fair approximation of the desk and monitor of an average bearded person. If you want the experience of sitting at my actual desk, blow up this image and obscure your monitor with empty Kickstart cans.
Free from Caillou, the Leviathan helped my PC watch countless horrible YouTube videos in-between bouts of Far Cry 4 and World of Warcraft.
I also connected my iPhone to the unit via Bluetooth and blasted some questionable music, And apparently I was feeling saucy, as I played quite a few iPad games with the Leviathan handling sound duties. Considering the iPadās unfortunate speaker situation, it was an incredibly pleasant change.
What I Liked
Low Profile: Iāve been looking for a sound bar for my PC for quite some time, ever since I stopped trying to put speakers everywhere and bought a bar for the living room. I was just worried that whatever I wound up with would obscure my desktop, as my AOC monitor is pretty low to the desk.
The Leviathan fits the space perfectly. Here, Iāll snap a quick shot of how it lines up with my monitor.
Can you see that? No? See, thatās why I donāt take pictures of my desk. Itās a wreck. Just trust me, itās really nice.
Good Looks: Not only is the Leviathan small (look kids, irony!), itās also quite lovely as black bars go. I was expecting the traditional black-and-green Razer motif, but instead itās a tasteful silver logo facing the general public, as if to say āIām trying to be tasteful here.ā Razerās signature style is represented by indents on the top and bottom of the barās middle, but other than that the productās performance is the loudest thing in the room.
Sharp and Powerful Sound: The Razer Leviathan has more than enough power to fill our ample livingroom (well, 15 feet by 16 feet) with crisp, mildly deafening sound. The clarity of this sound bar at max volume is wondrous, the only rattle I experienced being the various loose things sitting atop my TV stand threatening to wander off.
And if itās that powerful in the living room, imagine it being three feet from your face while youāre playing a PC game. Iāve yet to turn it up all the way while playing PC games because Iām worried about sound complaints from my neighbors. Still, even without setting the volume to āEardrum Nemesisā the sound is so strong you can almost feel it.
Speaking of whichā¦
The Subwoofer. Oh Lord, the Subwoofer. Where has this downward-facing bass demon been all my life?
The subwoofer included with the Razer Leviathan is a black monolith of full-range fury. When my desk shakes, itās this subwoofer what shakes it. Iām not the sort of person who goes out of his way to ensure he feels his music and game audio, but if Iām going to feel it I want to feel actively abused by it. This nondescript fellow gets the job done. Razer could have called this the Leviathan Subwoofer with sound bar.
What I Didnāt Like
Sleepy Time: After 20 minutes idle, the Leviathan shuts itself off. How considerate. How annoying.
Itās not a problem when the Leviathan is hooked up to a television, and most game consoles these days have some sort of music playing at the menu level (get with the program, Xbox One) to keep the sound bar alive.
My PC, on the other hand, often goes a good 20 minutes without making a peep, so when I go to watch a video or start up a game, Iāve got no sound.
If all I had to do in this instance was hit the power button, that wouldnāt be too much of a hassle, but the volume lowers automatically as well, so Iāve got to power it back on and pump up the volume to make all of the sounds work. Annoying.
Surround Sound-ish: The Leviathan uses Dolby Pro Logic II to convert standard audio signals into 5.1 stereo surround sound. It works, certainly enough to offer a player an idea of where shots are coming from or which direction the cougars are attacking from, but itās never quite all there.
Itās sort of like seeing something out of the corner of your eye. You know itās there, you can make out what it is, but it never fully coalesces until you turn to face it.
My Final Word
The Razer Leviathan 5.1 Channel Surround Sound Bar is Razerās first attempt at non-personal audio, and it has the power to please a great many ears at once. That said, I feel the best place for this lovely piece of sound engineering is in front of a PC monitor.
The Leviathanās room-filling sound provided exactly the sort of power I was looking for in a speaker that sits only a few feet from my face. Partnered with its subwoofer life-mate, its more sound than any PC gamer needs, which is exactly the sort of thing we want.
To contact the author of this post, write to [emailĀ protected] or find him on Twitter @bunnyspatial