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Elgato Wave 3 review: A killer mic for aspiring podcasters and YouTubers

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Elgato Wave 3 review: A killer mic for aspiring podcasters and YouTubers

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Elgato is a brand best known in the game streaming community. Its video capture devices are the go-to solutions for Twitch superstars and YouTube gaming channel creators. Not satisfied with enabling great home video capture, the company teamed up with Lewitt to produce a USB microphone that aims to give content creators professional results at an affordable price.

The result is the Wave:3, a $160 USB microphone that delivers remarkably good sound quality for vocal recordings (a simpler Wave:1 is also available for $130). While Elgato aims many of its other products at PC gamers, the Wave mics are equally marketed toward podcasters and YouTubers, where the Mac has a much larger presence.

A combination of high quality, affordable hardware along with an excellent software mixing panel makes the Wave:3 an especially appealing choice for anyone using their Mac to record podcasts, voice-overs for YouTube videos, or even singing.

An elegant, lightweight design

The Wave:3 has a simple design, with a lightweight mix of plastic and metal that looks, well, like you’d expect a studio microphone to look. Most of the weight is in the sturdy stand, which unscrews to a standard 3/8-inch mount. You’ll find an adapter to 5/8-inch threading in the box, so you can easily attach the mic to the booms and mounts that use that size.

Up front is a multi-function dial. Press it to switch between microphone gain, headphone volume, and monitor/output mix. Around the back is the USB-C port (the main interface for your computer) and a 1/8-inch headphone jack. It is a rather powerful headphone jack, suitable for most studio cans and maybe a little too much for everyday consumer earbuds and the like.

elgato wave3 controls Elgato

The front dial lets you control gain, headphone volume, and monitor crossfade.

The headphone jack serves as output for direct microphone monitoring and as a USB sound output device for your Mac or PC, and you use the multi-function dial up front to adjust the mix as you’d like.

elgato wave3 rear Elgato

The rear houses the USB-C connection and a high-power headphone jack.

Up top you’ll find a capacitive mute button. At first this seemed like a ridiculous extravagance to me, but it’s actually clever design—it is located in a place you’re unlikely to hit as you grip the sides of the mic to adjust its position, and a clickable button often produces an audible sound when muting or un-muting.

There’s little to complain about from the perspective of a desktop USB microphone. If you ever want to step up to a more professional setup, you’ll long for an XLR plug and quarter-inch headphone jack, but that’s simply not what this mic is made for. This is a mic for computer-based recording at home (or traveling with a laptop), and for that the design is aces.

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