It effectively blocks out low frequencies like the vibrating rumble of trucks or a persistent air conditioner, but it doesn't do particularly well with low-mid frequencies like voices. The active noise cancelation, while good, isn't quite up to the same standards. These are among the best-sounding true wireless earbuds I've heard, rivaling more expensive options like Sennheiser's Momentum True Wireless 2 for depth and clarity. I bounced from Blackstar's ' Definition' to Andrew Bird's ' Left Handed Kisses' and both sounded warm and inviting. The Buds Pro are suitable for all genres of music, too. Listening to Nina Simone's ' My Baby Just Cares For Me' (2013 Remaster)', where Simone's gravely voice is just left of center, the timbre of the drums is felt as much as heard and the bass just floats, it's reminiscent of listening to a good pair of over-ear headphones. Samsung continues to respect its customers by not clouding music with unnecessary equalization Samsung Galaxy Buds Pro review: Now we have the $160 Galaxy Buds Pro, and in the ways it counts, I'm floored. The Buds+ laid solid sonic foundations while the Buds Live introduced a welcome redesign to the case and, more importantly, active noise cancelation.
It wasn't until 2020 that Samsung's true wireless earbud line hit its stride with the austere, affordable, and ridiculously long-lasting Galaxy Buds+ in February followed up by the now-iconic (and still-weird) bean-shaped Galaxy Buds Live in August. The first pair of true wireless earbuds to sport the Galaxy brand, 2019's Galaxy Buds, experienced major connectivity problems that required months of updates to fix.
The successor, a year later, had finicky controls.
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As with Samsung's first few Android phones, its first couple attempts at building wireless earbuds were ambitious but rife with problems: the original IconX, from 2016, had terrible battery life.