Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2: one-minute review
You can always tell when a product launch means a lot to a company. There’s almost an air of mystery surrounding it. The Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2 wireless gaming headset is a textbook example of that. Tightly controlled review NDA up front. Mysterious box with “packed under CCTV surveillance” tape plastered across the side of it. PR check-ins to see how I’m doing. You get the works. And to be fair to them, I can understand why.
I’m glad to report that the Stealth Pro 2, in many ways similar to its predecessor, is purely outstanding. And it achieves that heady height, while also dramatically improving in every area that the original Stealth Pro fell short on. The product design team at Turtle Beach took the feedback from the original Stealth Pro and pretty much corrected all of its faults, making it arguably one of the best wireless gaming headsets of 2026.
Let’s start with the audio. These are gaming drivers here; there’s no doubt about that. The bass is rich and mids deep; it does lack “some” clarity at first try on the top-end, but a quick dabble in the EQs and you can easily tweak that out of it. Then there’s the mic, a removable, flippable, unidirectional 9mm beamforming unit that honestly competes with some of the best fully-fledged XLR setups I’ve tested.
Connectivity, too, lands solidly with multi-wireless crossplay and simultaneous Bluetooth 5.3 included as standard, and the wireless range is massive (I left my house and walked down the street for 80-odd feet / 25 meters before I gave up and went home). Oh, and did I mention the battery life? Because yeah, it’s 80 hours, courtesy of two battery packs, each rated at 40 hours apiece, one permanently charging in that 2.4 GHz wireless super dock that plugs directly into your PC.
It’s hard to critique this thing. If I had one complaint, it’s that I have some concern over the headband mesh and the clamping force. Particularly for those with craniums of a somewhat larger size.
A necessary evil, perhaps, to assist with that active noise cancelling, but it might take a bit of time to get used to if you’re not familiar with studio-style headphones. And yet, that is still not enough to outweigh the vast heaping of pure aura that Turtle Beach has managed to imbue into this thing with practically everything else. It is a delight to use, and a headset I’ll be sad to see go.
Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2: Price and availability
- Costs £300 / $350 / €350 / AU$550
- Available in two colorways
- Not much more expensive than the first gen
The Stealth Pro 2 launches in May 2026 worldwide and should be readily available at all the major retailers in your region. It’s not a cheap headset by any means, but it’s in no way a bad value proposition when you consider what you’re actually getting for that price.
Available in two finishes, either black or white, you can also grab an Xbox or “console” specific version if you need that Microsoft compatibility. The standard PC variant will hook up to anything with Bluetooth or up to four other wireless 2.4 GHz devices that support USB (with two included as standard).
Compared to last gen, the Pro 2 has seen some serious advancements as well. The drivers have shot up in size from 50mm to 60mm, and moved to a dual tweeter and woofer design, audio fidelity has been Hi-Res certified, battery life has increased by well over 200%, ANC is now adjustable, the mic is removable, the list goes on and on, so the value proposition compared to its predecessor is strong.
Honestly, it’s got a feature set that matches the SteelSeries Arctis Nova Elite, a headset that comes in at nearly twice the cost, and this one comes with a hard case too.
Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2: Specs
| Row 0 – Cell 0 |
Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2 |
|
Price |
£300 / $350 / €350 / AU$550 |
|
Weight |
13.9oz / 393g |
|
Drivers |
60mm Eclipse dual drivers |
|
Compatibility |
PC, PS4/PS5, Xbox Series X/S (console version only), iOS/Android Switch, Switch 2, Steam Deck |
|
Connection type |
2.4 GHz Wireless / Bluetooth5.3 |
|
Battery life |
80 hours (40 hours per hot swappable battery) |
|
Features |
Hi-Res Audio certified (24-bit/96kHz wireless), Dolby Atmos, adjustable ANC, CrossPlay 2.0 multi-transmitter switching (up to 4 devices), AI noise-reduction beamforming mic, hard storage case, quick charge |
|
Software |
Turtle Beach Swarm 2 (PC) |
Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2: Design and Features
- Materials look and feel fantastic
- Insane connectivity & battery
- Bulky design
Let’s talk headline specs before I even land on the physical stuff here. 60mm dynamic “Eclipse” dual driver design (you get both a woofer and a tweeter in each earcup), 10mm larger than its predecessor. 10Hz to 40kHz frequency response frame. Fully Hi-Res certified at 24-bit/96KHz, even over Wireless 2.4GHz, and Bluetooth 5.3. Compatible sync with up to four separate USB 2.4GHz wireless devices at any time (you can swap with a simple button on the headset).
Adjustable Active Noise Cancelling (ANC) with passthrough options as well. A seriously impressive 9mm beamforming mic (with AI noise reduction added on top), and a battery life of 80 hours, thanks to two hot-swappable packs. One that’s always in the headset, and the other that lives in a chunky charging dock and wireless hub. Making it effectively an infinite charge at that point. It’s brimming with tech to a purely insane degree. And it all comes in this lush little hard case, too.
The physical build, as well, is just outstanding. If I’m honest, the original Stealth Pro design, for me, was a little lacklustre; it delivered where it counted on the feature set and quality, but its overall appearance left me underwhelmed, like a discount SteelSeries. The Pro 2, on the other hand, is a different beast.
It has its own unique style and look. Where there is plastic, it has a soft touch finish; there’s metal support bars beautifully curved around, beautifully, fully gussied up in this pristine satin black coating, copper metallic accents throughout, and the headband too is a soft mesh fabric that contorts to the shape of your skull quite nicely. It’s all adjustable too, you get the usual mod-cons including rotatable ear-cups, memory foam padding, the works.
It is quite a large headset by design; those 60mm dual drivers do need space, and so each cup is a chunky old thing, but that’s the price you pay for that quality. Would I wear this out and about, even with that removable mic, er, removed? Possibly, but I’m not sure it’s really designed for that.
That hub, though, is such a power play. It’s a simple thing, an angled circle, no bigger than a drinks coaster, albeit a bit taller, and you just pop your wee spare Turtle Beach battery in it to charge. There’s a physical button here too, that satisfyingly pops it out when you need it, and a slim ring of LED light illuminates the edges, giving you a visual indicator of which noise-cancelling mode you’re in, or whether your mic is muted.
That’s such a huge win here as well. I can’t overstate that. I was testing the Sony Inzone H9 2 earlier this year, in fact, and it’s a solid headset as well, priced very similarly, but its battery life is, well, a bit “average”. It only nets 30 hours or so with ANC disabled. Plus, once it’s dead, you’ve then gotta find the USB cable, plug it in, or charge it up wired, and having the option to just hot-swap like you can with the Stealth Pro 2, is a real treat. Particularly given that each individual battery beats the Sony by a good 33% or so.
The software has had a major refit as well. Swarm 2 is a different beast than its predecessor. It runs smoothly, there’s no login required or clunky download procedures, you can adjust everything you need to on the fly, including ANC sensitivity, game-chat mix, EQs, that Superhuman hearing mode, and reprogram some of the buttons on the Stealth Pro 2.
The only downsides I found during testing were again there’s a bit of tightness on first use on the clamping force (although that did seem to ease with time), and it’s well, not light, for sure. Never skip neck day, though, and you’ll be fine.
Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2: Performance
- Stunning audio quality
- Brilliant microphone
- Wireless range is nuts
I never thought I’d start a performance segment for a headset talking about wireless range, but here we are. One of the standard tests I perform for a unit like this involves me walking around my home (a small three-bed semi-detached house), to see where the wireless signal cuts out. Just to get a gauge of how the dongle holds up.
In the Stealth Pro 2’s case, it managed every single room in my home just fine. So, I decided to take it one step further, opened my front door, and started walking down the street. I kept going and going and going, and started to question my sanity, as it continued to play just fine, just as clear, just as crisp.
No phone, no other devices, different tracks from Tidal, through my house’s brick walls, and trees, fences, and foliage, all the way down the street for about 85 feet / 25 meters. At which point, it didn’t give out, I stopped, turned around, and came home. I suspect this is because the wireless hub has some seriously impressive antennas in it, doing a lot of heavy lifting, but the fact that it outperformed my router is telling.
As for audio quality, the Pro 2 dominates that arena as well. When you first use it, you definitely know it’s a gaming headset. It has the telltale emphasis on the lows and mids that’s such a common signature in units like this (i.e., make explosions boom more), but it’s not particularly to its detriment; there’s no washed-out treble or higher-end mids at all, really. It reads beautifully on the soundscape, regardless of what audio you push through it. Movies, games, music of all genres.
Personally, I prefer a more balanced soundscape, and the standard profile Turtle Beach is using here doesn’t quite hit that, but it’s by no means bad. Jump into the Swarm 2 app, and you can swap between four standard EQs (signature, bass boost, treble and bass boost, and vocal boost), and they do remarkably change the profile quite nicely depending on what you fancy on the day.
You can find my testing preset below, but effectively, you want a recurve bow shape starting from 5dB on the bass, hollowing out in the 500Hz range, and then climbing back up again to just under +5dB on the 16Hz range, and you’ll be golden.
The microphone is a pretty stellar experience as well. When compared to a full-fat Elgato Wave XLR setup combined with a Shure 55SH-II, it was impressively similar. There was a warmth to it that the 55SH just didn’t capture amazingly. It did lose out on treble, and of course, that XLR setup is far more ideal if you’re taking it into editing software after the fact, but if your aim is to sit in Discord and be perfectly heard by your raid on a Friday night, this just doesn’t disappoint.
The Stealth Pro 2 is, honestly, remarkable. What Turtle Beach has achieved here on such a budget is wild. Honestly, the best comparison that comes to mind is actually SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless, and yeah, it is a couple of years old at this point, but it actually does deliver on a lot of the same premise, or tries to. Multi-connectivity, hot-swappable batteries, 10Hz to 40kHz frequency response. But the ANC was average at best, the price tag (at launch) was higher than it is today, and it just felt a little off by comparison. And to be clear, SteelSeries has a hell of a lot more experience in the gaming headset market than Turtle Beach does.
Yet here we are, a couple of years on, with a brand delivering on a product that shouldn’t be as good as it is, at a price that’s just right. It’s awesome. From the sound it produces, to the audio it captures, to the battery life, wireless range, looks, man, it just nails it.
Should you buy the Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2?
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2: Also consider…
The Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2 not giving you the right feel? Here’s how it compares to a few others.
| Row 0 – Cell 0 |
Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2 |
Sony Inzone H9 2 |
SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless |
|
Price |
£300 / $350 / €350 / AU$550 |
$348.00 / £299.00 / around AU$489 |
$349.99 / £329.99 (around AU$649) |
|
Weight |
13.9oz / 393g |
9.2oz / 260g |
11.9oz / 337g |
|
Drivers |
60mm Eclipse dual drivers |
30mm carbon-fibre composite dome |
40mm Neodymium |
|
Compatibility |
PC, PS4/PS5, Xbox Series X/S (console version only), iOS/Android Switch, Switch 2, Steam Deck |
PC, PS4/PS5, Xbox Series X/S (wired only), iOS/Android, Switch, Switch 2, Steam Deck |
PC, PS4/PS5, Handheld, Switch, Switch 2, iOS/Android |
|
Connection type |
2.4 GHz Wireless / Bluetooth5.3 |
2.4 GHz Wireless, Bluetooth, USB Wired, 3.5mm Analog |
Dual USB, Wireless 2.4 GHz, Bluetooth, |
|
Battery life |
80 hours (40 hours per hot swappable battery) |
30 Hours (with ANC disabled) |
44 hours of battery life (22 hours per hot swappable battery) |
|
Features |
Hi-Res Audio certified (24-bit/96kHz wireless), Dolby Atmos, adjustable ANC, CrossPlay 2.0 multi-transmitter switching (up to 4 devices), AI noise-reduction beamforming mic, hard storage case, quick charge |
ANC with ambient mode, 360 Spatial Sound, multipoint, detachable boom mic, ski-band suspension headband |
ANC, magnetic drivers, 360-degree spatial audio, retractable ClearCast 2.X mic |
|
Software |
Turtle Beach Swarm 2 (PC) |
INZONE Hub |
SteelSeries GG/Sonar (PC) |
How I tested the Turtle Beach Stealth Pro 2
- Two weeks of continual use as my daily driver, utilised for gaming, working, and general PC use, tested on PS5 and Nintendo Switch 2 too
- Tested across all manner of music genres and film content as well, covering every type and style possible, as well as range tests on the 2.4GHz connection
- Compared side-by-side with multiple audiophile-grade headphones, including Audio-Technica’s ATH-A2000Z and Sony’s Inzone H9 2 wireless headphones
I spent around two weeks continually testing the Stealth Pro 2, fully integrating it into my work and play setups. I used it predominantly on my compact RTX 5080 gaming PC, running alongside a set of Audioengine A2+ Wireless speakers, and a full Elgato XLR DAC setup with a Shure 55SH-2 microphone as well. In that time, I tested it mostly utilising Tidal’s hi-fidelity content, and also in-game in the likes of Total War: Warhammer 3, Stellaris, and World of Warcraft Classic.
For the audio-recording tests, I used Windows in built sound recording software, doing direct comparisons between it and the Shure 55SH-2, reading an identical script back-to-back, then comparing the output.
I also connected it directly to a Nintendo Switch 2, Steam Deck OLED, and my PS5 to ensure console compatibility worked without fault, as well as fully testing the ANC in all of the modes available to me (including the dynamic adjustment slider).
Dedicated audio analysis test sessions were also fully implemented (effectively, me listening to the same songs on repeat, swapping between the Stealth Pro 2, the ATH-A2000Zs, and Sony’s Inzone H9 2 wireless headset as well. These generally took around 30 minutes or so, using the same tracks, to identify differences between the soundstages, along with any necessary adjustments to EQs and the like.
I also performed a “walk round” test, with Tidal playing, I took the Stealth Pro 2 on an adventure around my entire property, before leaving the house entirely and walking down the street for around 25 meters, to see how far the wireless range held up.
First reviewed May 2026















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