Tech
Audeze ReSkin Lets Maxwell 2 Gamers Customize Their Headset Without Buying a New One
Audeze was early to figure out something the rest of the headphone industry was slow to accept: gaming was not a side quest. It became a multi-billion dollar category, and gamers were no longer satisfied with disposable plastic headsets that sounded like a drive-thru speaker with RGB lighting.
The California-based planar magnetic headphone specialist jumped into the space years ago with the Mobius, followed by the original Maxwell, both of which helped establish Audeze as a serious player in high-performance gaming audio. Maxwell’s success also arrived before Sony Interactive Entertainment acquired Audeze, a move that made it very clear that premium gaming audio had become big business.
Now Audeze is taking the personalization angle further with ReSkin, a new program built around the Maxwell 2’s user-swappable magnetic earcup covers. The idea is simple: give Maxwell 2 owners a way to change the look of their headset without replacing the headset itself.
Audeze gave me and Editor-at-Large Chris Boylan a first look at ReSkin during CanJam NYC 2026, but the original designs were not ready for publication until the program was finalized. That restraint was probably wise. Gamers are not one tribe with one uniform. They are competitive players, streamers, collectors, anime fans, sci-fi addicts, design nerds, and people who just want their gear to look less like it was issued by an IT department with trust issues. ReSkin is Audeze recognizing that sound quality matters, but identity matters too.
What Is the Audeze Maxwell 2?
The Audeze Maxwell 2 is Audeze’s second generation wireless gaming headset, designed for players who want serious audio performance without giving up battery life, comfort, or broad platform support. It uses 90 mm planar magnetic drivers with Audeze’s Fluxor magnet arrays and Fazor waveguides, along with the company’s newer SLAM acoustic technology, which is designed to improve spatial precision and low frequency control without leaning only on DSP tricks.
Maxwell 2 also keeps the practical stuff in focus. It supports PlayStation, Xbox, Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, and Nintendo Switch, depending on version and connection type, with a USB-C low latency wireless dongle, Bluetooth 5.3, LDAC, LE Audio, AAC, and SBC support. Battery life is rated at over 80 hours at 80 dBA, which matters if your idea of a short gaming session somehow ends at 2:17 a.m. with poor decisions and one more match.
The design changes are not just cosmetic. Audeze reworked the suspension strap, earpads, internal fit, microphone system, and control app. The removable boom mic uses upgraded FILTER AI noise reduction, while the new app gives users more control over settings across desktop and mobile platforms. The magnetic earcup system also opens the door for ReSkin, which lets Maxwell 2 owners change the look of the headset without replacing the entire product. That is the smart part: Audeze is treating personalization as part of ownership, not as an excuse to sell another headset.
ReSkin Job?
The first wave of Audeze ReSkin designs gives Maxwell 2 owners a range of curated magnetic earcup covers that go well beyond basic color swaps. The launch lineup includes Panopticon All Seeing Eye, Flux Warning Futuristic Biohazard Sign, Kankan Koneko Angry Cat, Planar Scan Audeze Driver Design, White Audeze Deco Cup Contemporary Style, and the Dia De Los Muertos No.001 to No.006 Prestige Edition designs.
The Dia De Los Muertos Prestige Edition pieces are the most limited and artisanal of the group. Audeze says those designs are handcrafted by a Southern California artisan and finished with a high gloss lacquer, giving them a more durable shine and a different feel from the standard designs. That matters because this is not Audeze tossing a few skins into the box and calling it customization. These are physical earcup attachments for a headset that was already designed to support magnetic cover swaps.
Audeze CEO Sankar Thiagasamudram says the goal is to give Maxwell fans “unique styles and looks,” with more designs and collaborations planned. That makes sense. Gamers are not a monolith, and neither are headphone buyers. Some want clean and understated. Others want angry cats, warning labels, driver graphics, or something that looks like it escaped a late night anime marathon with unfinished business.
The key detail is how simple the system appears to be. Maxwell 2’s earcup covers attach magnetically and can be removed with a simple motion, which means owners can change the look of the headset without tools, adhesive, or the kind of DIY mistake that ends with regret and customer support. ReSkin works because Maxwell 2 was built for this from the start.
The Bottom Line
Audeze ReSkin gives Maxwell 2 owners a simple way to personalize their headset without replacing it or reaching for cheap stick-on skins. The magnetic earcup covers are available now for $39.99 or $59.99 each, work with both the PlayStation and Xbox versions, and turn customization into something physical, swappable, and actually tied to the product design. This is for Maxwell 2 owners who care about performance but also want their headset to look like theirs, not another black plastic gaming appliance waiting for a firmware update and therapy.
Where to buy: $349 at Audeze | Crutchfield | Amazon
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