Home Latest HyperX Cloud Flight S review: An improvement, even if Qi charging still fails to impress

HyperX Cloud Flight S review: An improvement, even if Qi charging still fails to impress

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HyperX Cloud Flight S review: An improvement, even if Qi charging still fails to impress

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When Astro integrated charging into the A50 base station in 2016, I figured it was only a matter of time before other headsets followed. Finally, a headset I’d remember to charge. Finally, a headset that wouldn’t die on me mid-game. The A50 base station was so intuitive, so effortless, so convenient. Surely, others would “borrow” the idea in due time.

Alas, four years and an A50 redesign later, nobody’s been so bold.

The new HyperX Cloud Flight S comes closest to copying Astro though. While nowhere near as sophisticated as Astro’s design, the Cloud Flight S’s integrated Qi charging facilitates the same set-and-forget behavior—though it would help if HyperX actually included a Qi charging pad in the box.

Note: This review is part of our roundup of best gaming headsets. Go there for details on competing products and how we tested them.

The more things change…

Given the name, I expected the Cloud Flight S to be essentially the same headset I reviewed in 2018, but with Qi capabilities—and to a certain extent, that’s the case.

HyperX tweaked more than I expected though. I hardly recognized the Cloud Flight S when I pulled it out of the box. This second attempt is much more attractive than the first. The original Cloud Flight felt cheap, and its abundance of plastic, chintzy red accents, and generic shape made it one of HyperX’s blander attempts.

HyperX Cloud Flight S IDG / Hayden Dingman

The Cloud Flight S is still very plastic. That hasn’t changed. HyperX has cleaned the design up though, ditching the crimson wires and thereby opening up the fork where headband meets earcup. And on said earcups? Crisp, white logos.

These are small changes, barely worth noting in isolation—and yet it’s amazing how such small changes affect the overall look and feel when taken together. The original Cloud Flight looked like a third-rate budget headset stumbled into a $160 list price. Remove a wire, change the color scheme, and the Cloud Flight S looks slick and modern.

The onboard controls received an upgrade as well. The original Cloud Flight S featured a power button, volume roller, and an oversized mute button on the face of the left earcup, and that was it. And it was enough! The first HyperX headset to really nail built-in controls—I was pretty damn pleased with that first Cloud Flight.

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