Tech
Devialet Phantom Ultimate Roland Garros Exclusive Edition Brings Clay Court Style to French Wireless Audio Without Serving Up Soft Bass
Leave it to the French to come up with something this stylish, expensive, and completely unwilling to explain itself to anyone drinking domestic sparkling wine.
Devialet’s Phantom Ultimate Roland Garros Exclusive Edition is what happens when a French acoustic engineering company partners with the world’s most famous clay court tennis tournament: a limited edition Phantom Ultimate speaker dressed like it just won match point in Paris and refuses to apologize for the outfit.
Finished in clay red with warm ochre tones, white court line detailing, and the official Roland Garros logo, it is limited to a few hundred pieces, making it less “buy one for the kitchen” and more “collector piece for someone who already knows where the good Champagne is stored, keeps foie gras within striking distance, and treats your Bluetooth speaker like a peasant with a tambourine.”
The design is more than a color swap. Devialet says the side panels were created to evoke the reflection of Court Philippe Chatrier on the silver of the Coupe des Mousquetaires, the trophy awarded to the men’s singles champion. The white lines are laser engraved and finished with multiple coats of high gloss lacquer, while the Roland Garros logo is applied using a multi layer pad printing process. Très subtle? Not exactly. But subtlety was never really the Phantom’s department.
Same Phantom Ultimate Performance, Now With More Clay Court Drama
Under the Roland Garros finish, this remains the Devialet Phantom Ultimate platform, which we recently reviewed and found to be one of the more serious attempts to make a compact wireless speaker behave like something far larger. The Phantom formula has always been about controlled violence in a small enclosure: deep bass, high output, active processing, and a design that looks like it escaped from a French aerospace lab after a long lunch.
The Roland Garros edition will be offered in two versions. The larger Phantom Ultimate 108 dB version delivers 1,100 watts of amplification and a stated frequency range of 14 Hz to 35 kHz, with 32 bit 96 kHz audio processing. The smaller Phantom Ultimate 98 dB version delivers 400 watts and a stated frequency range of 18 Hz to 25 kHz.
Those numbers are not decoration. In our experience with the Phantom Ultimate 108 dB, the speaker’s appeal is not just that it plays loud or reaches low. Plenty of wireless speakers claim big bass and then proceed to smear everything like overcooked brie. The Devialet approach is more controlled, more physical, and more precise than most lifestyle wireless speakers at this level. It still sounds like a Phantom, which means it wants to impress you immediately.
The difference with the Ultimate generation is that the software, streaming support, processing, and user controls make it feel more complete. It is a category leading wireless speaker in every possible way.
The Tech Stack Still Matters
Devialet’s core technologies carry over here, including ADH, SAM, HBI, and AVL. In plain English, ADH combines analog Class A behavior with Class D power and efficiency. SAM is Devialet’s driver matching system, designed to control phase and amplitude in real time. HBI is responsible for the Phantom’s low frequency reach and physical bass impact. AVL adjusts volume behavior in real time to keep playback more balanced across different types of content.
The Phantom Ultimate also uses an NXP i.MX 8M Nano processor and runs on Devialet DOS3, the company’s newer software platform first introduced with the Devialet Astra amplifier. That matters because modern wireless speakers live or die by the app, the operating system, and streaming stability.
Streaming support includes AirPlay, Google Cast, Roon Ready, Spotify Connect, TIDAL Connect, Qobuz Connect, and UPnP. The Devialet app also includes Music, Podcast, and Cinema modes, along with a six band EQ, Bass Reducer, and Loudness controls. That gives users more flexibility than older Phantom models, especially if the speaker is doing double duty for music, TV, podcasts, and those “why is the dialogue buried under explosions?” movie nights.
Bose clearly got the memo with its new Lifestyle Ultra Soundbar as well. Some of us are getting older, some of us have spouses who do not appreciate the Stanley Cup Playoffs at 11 p.m. at full tilt, and some of the best moments in French cinema still involve uncomfortable silence, cigarettes, footsteps in the Marais, and the creeping suspicion that an international terrorist is about to ruin someone’s galette.
The Bottom Line
The Roland Garros edition is not for someone looking for the best wireless speaker bargain. That ship sailed, hit the clay, and got booed by the French crowd.
This is for the Devialet buyer who already likes the Phantom Ultimate but wants something more visually distinctive. It is also aimed at collectors, tennis fans with serious audio taste, and design conscious listeners who want a wireless speaker that does not look like another fabric wrapped cylinder apologizing from the corner.
The bigger 108 dB version makes the most sense for larger rooms or listeners who want the full Phantom experience with the most bass extension and output. The smaller 98 dB model is the better fit for bedrooms, offices, smaller living spaces, or anyone who wants the design and Devialet signature without detonating the room every time the playlist gets ambitious.
Pricing and Availability
The Devialet Phantom Ultimate Roland Garros Exclusive Edition launches on May 6, 2026 with a $200 or $400 premium of regular finishes. It will be available through select Devialet stores, Devialet’s website, the Roland Garros Megastore, and the official Roland Garros online boutique.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login