
Skullcandy
The Skullcandy Crusher PLYR 720 is a wireless over‑ear gaming headset featuring open‑back acoustics, dual haptic bass drivers, and THX Spatial Audio with head tracking. It offers versatile multi‑platform connectivity, up to 48 hours of battery life, and a suite of on‑head controls for immersive gaming and music experiences.
Pros
Current
$229.59
Average
$216.89
Lowest
$159.99
Highest
$269.99
Lower = better sales rank
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Cons
From Expert Reviews
Praised by Experts
Criticized by Experts
From User Reviews
Users Love
Users Complain About
Expert Opinion
Professional reviewers commend the Crusher PLYR 720 for its jaw‑dropping bass, expansive THX Spatial Audio soundstage, and flexible connectivity, noting it excels in immersive, bass‑heavy gaming experiences. However, they also flag its considerable weight, high latency, and limited wireless range as drawbacks that keep it from being a top choice for competitive esports or long‑duration sessions.
What Users Say
Everyday users love the headset’s powerful, feelable bass and the wide open‑back soundstage, praising its comfort for moderate playtimes and the convenience of multi‑device pairing. Recurring frustrations center on the headset’s heft, noticeable latency in fast‑paced games, short real‑world wireless range, and occasional auto‑sleep battery drain.
Common Complaints
Heavy weight leading to fatigue, high wireless latency (40‑50 ms), limited effective range (~12 ft), bass‑driven distortion, and unreliable auto‑sleep causing reduced battery life.
What People Are Saying
“face‑melting bass”
“must for FPS/bassheads”
“Insanely powerful, feelable bass and wide open‑back soundstage for gaming/movies”
How It Compares
vs. SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless
Advantages
Disadvantages
Choose the Crusher for bass‑driven immersion; choose the Arctis Nova for lighter weight and better latency.
vs. Audeze Maxwell
Advantages
Disadvantages
Pick the Crusher for budget‑friendly, bass‑heavy gaming; pick the Maxwell for ultra‑low latency competitive play.