Sennheiser - PC 360 G4ME
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Based on 1 year's data from Mar 17, 2026 How it works
Sennheiser PC38X are probably the closest you'll get. I think they have the same drivers as the HD560 or something similar. I have the original version of those, the PC 360 G4ME, and they're honestly not far off my Beyerdynamic DT770. Both have a very flat frequency response. Very accurate sound as well, and the mic is still the best I've ever tried on a headset. I've seen people compare the PC 360 G4ME to the HD600 even.
What kind of work? Are you just talking Zoom, etc, or like media editing? Personally, I can't stand headphones for more than a few minutes, so I also need a speaker of some sort. A great 2.1 or 2.0 bookshelf speaker system, or even a smaller sound bar, is more than sufficient for those times when you can't be arsed to wear your audio output. You don't need to consider *these specific models*, but they serve as examples of what you might want to look for within that product segment * **Speakers**: I am running my ancient Logitech Z2200 2.1 system until it dies - when that happens, I've been looking at something akin to the 2.0 AudioEngine A5. A subwoofer is nice, but tends to be heard more by the rest of the house than me standing right next to it. * **Wired headphones:** Do you need to be able to hear people in proximity to you? While the active noise canceling/amplification of some smarter headphones is nice, the tech can also be spendy. Open-back headphones like the Sennheizer PC360 are a great passive headset alternative for being able to hear people around you - excellent flip up mic with a satisfying *click*, and a very long cable. If you want to passively block out everything around you, HyperX Cloud Alpha or similar aren't noise-cancelling, but are well-insulated and have tremendous bass response, with a good-enough mic. Since you already have a gaming headset, and most of those are closed-back, I'm guessing the Cloud Alpha would be a redundant choice; but being able to swap between closed and open back headphones is a nice-to-have. * **Wireless headphones:** I don't have as much experience in this segment, but I will say that you should consider if the model you're looking at has a smartphone app. I got the SteelSeries Arctis Nova 7 on sale, and while they are comfortable and sound clear, their iOS app doesn't support *that particular model*, and it came with a volume limit enabled by default that I couldn't disable until I found a PC to install their software; that said, while the setup was annoying, I've never needed to use the software since. Their little USB-C dongle is nice, too for switching between multiple devices (my biggest annoyance with Bluetooth).
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