
The shorter cable features a small in-line controller with a slide-to-mute control for the microphone and a simple volume wheel for the headphones, nothing fancy but more than enough to get the job done. Then there is also a headphone and microphone male to female 3.5mm extension cable to allow a longer reach for use with your PC or similar device. There wasn’t much in the box but the headset does come hard-wired with a shorter cable, suitable for headphone usage with an mp3 player or mobile device. The headset comes nicely packaged in a windowed box, giving a great view of the headset design and so far things are looking pretty good.Īround the back we have a breakdown of the major features of the headset and some technical information broken up into multiple languages. The set we are looking today sits nicely in the middle and you can pick up the red pair for around £60 from most major online retailers and that to my mind makes these reasonably friendly to the wallet but they’re still not drastically cheap either, so I would still expect to see some impressive performance in return for my investment.Īs you can see from the specs below the headset is powered by 3.5mm jacks, featuring a long cable and some fairly decent drivers, so let’s get straight to the good stuff and see just what this headset really has to offer.


The Siberia V2 is priced all over the place, you can pick up some editions cheap at £40 and some closer to £100 and this all seems to do with the rarity of the model in questions, they all have the same feature set but the combination of colours and designs seems to have the biggest effect as Steelseries have released a huge range of limited editions, special editions and more to suit almost every style you can think of.

Today we will be taking a look at one of the hottest headsets on the market and while the Siberia V2 isn’t exactly new, it’s still one of the top choices for gamers around the world and put simply, we wanted to find out why.
