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Noble Osprey Wireless Earbuds Debut at High End Vienna 2026: Entry-Level Price, Noble DNA

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Noble Audio is using High End Vienna 2026 to expand its true wireless lineup with the new Osprey, an entry-level earbud aimed at listeners who want the Noble house sound without wandering into $300-plus wallet damage. Priced below $200, the Osprey gives Noble a more accessible option in a category it already knows well, combining everyday wireless convenience with the brand’s focus on balanced tuning, musicality, and a more refined presentation than most budget true wireless earbuds can usually manage.

Construction & Exterior Design

The Osprey follows the design language Noble Audio has used across its true wireless lineup, with a distinctive marbled faceplate that gives the earbuds a more finished look than the usual plastic black-bean approach. It is a small touch, but a useful one in a crowded category where most affordable wireless earbuds look like they were issued by the same factory committee.

Noble also includes a compact aluminum charging case, which should give the Osprey a more durable and premium feel without making it bulky. The goal here is practical: a lower-cost Noble earbud that still looks and feels like it belongs in the family.

The Osprey uses an ergonomic earbud shell designed to sit securely in the ear without feeling bulky. A proper fit should improve passive isolation, which matters more than most people admit with true wireless earbuds.

Noble includes multiple eartip sizes to help users find the best seal for comfort, stability, and consistent sound quality over longer listening sessions.

Drivers

The Osprey uses a hybrid dual driver configuration, pairing a 10mm dynamic driver with a custom balanced armature. In theory, that gives Noble more room to divide the workload: the dynamic driver handles low frequency weight and impact, while the balanced armature supports midrange and treble detail.

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That does not automatically guarantee magic. This is still an earbud under $200. But it does give the Osprey a more ambitious driver platform than many entry level true wireless models. The goal is controlled bass, clear mids, and better high frequency separation without pushing the sound into something thin or etched.

High-Resolution Wireless Connectivity

Powered by an Airoha 1571 Bluetooth chipset, the Osprey supports noise cancellation (ANC) and Bluetooth multipoint pairing for seamless device switching. With Bluetooth 5.4 and TrueWireless Mirroring, the Osprey provides a stable, low-latency connection whether you’re streaming high-resolution audio or making calls.

Clear Phone Calling

For calls and virtual meetings, the Osprey employs a dual-microphone array with Qualcomm cVc noise suppression. This technology minimizes background noise while preserving the natural tone and dynamics of your voice, ensuring speech remains clear and intelligible in both professional and everyday environments

The Osprey includes Active Noise Cancellation and a Hearing Through mode, giving listeners some flexibility when moving between commuting, office use, calls, and street noise. Integrated cVc noise reduction is also included to help improve voice pickup during calls, although real world results will still depend on wind, background noise, and microphone placement.

Battery life is rated at up to 7 hours with ANC turned off, or up to 5 hours with ANC enabled. The 500mAh charging case extends total playback time, and Noble claims a 10 minute quick charge can provide roughly 2 hours of listening. 

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Battery Life

The Osprey includes a 500mAh wireless charging case, which extends playback beyond the earbuds themselves. Noble rates battery life at up to 7 hours with ANC turned off, or up to 5 hours with ANC enabled. A 10 minute quick charge provides roughly 2 hours of listening.

Those figures are suitable for daily use, especially given the Osprey’s under $200 price point, ANC support, hybrid driver design, and wireless charging case.

Companion App

For ease of use, the Osprey is compatible with the Noble Audio app, which offers EQ and OTA software updates, keeping the Osprey relevant for as long as you use them. 

Comparison

Noble Model Opsrey (2026) FoKus Prestige Encore (2025) FoKus Rex5 (2024) FoKus Amadeus (2025) FoKus Prestige (2023)
Product Type TWS – True Wireless Stereo Earphones TWS – True Wireless Stereo Earphones TWS – True Wireless Stereo Earphones TWS – True Wireless Stereo Earphones TWS – True Wireless Stereo Earphones
Price  $199 $699 $449 $320 $599
Design Marbled exterior on earbuds with an aluminum charging case CNC-machined from solid wood – no two Encores look alike Aluminum and acrylic Shells: Glossy black resin.

Faceplates: Red celluloid.

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Charging Case Body: Matte black aluminum.

Charging Case Lid: Crimson red aluminum.

Plastic (with CNC-machined wooden body and case)
Driver system 10mm dynamic driver, custom balanced armature 1 × 8mm Dynamic, 2 × BA, 1 × 6mm Planar Magnetic 1 × 10mm Dynamic, 3  × BA, 1 × 6mm Planar Magnetic 8.3mm custom triple-layer dynamic diaphragm 1 x 8.2mm Dynamic Driver, 2 x Knowles Balanced Armature Drivers
Chipset Airoha 1571  Qualcomm® QCC3091 Qualcomm® QCC3091 Qualcomm QCC3091 Not Indicated
Bluetooth 5.4 with TrueWireless Mirroring and multipoint support 5.4 with TrueWireless Mirroring and multipoint support 5.4 with TrueWireless Mirroring and multipoint support 5.4 with TrueWireless Mirroring and multipoint support 5.2
Bluetooth Codecs SBC / AAC / LDAC  aptX Lossless, aptX Adaptive, LDAC, AAC, SBC SBC, AAC, aptX Adaptive, LDAC SBC, AAC, aptX Adaptive, LDAC SBC, AAC, aptX Adaptive, LDAC
Noise control Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) + HearThrough mode Hybrid Active Noise Cancelling + HearThrough mode Active Noise Cancellation (ANC), Transparency, and Basic modes Active Noise Cancellation + Transparency Mode Not indicated
Phone Calling Dual-mic cVc™ noise suppression Dual-mic cVc™ noise suppression Dual-mic cVc™ noise suppression Dual-mic cVc™ noise suppression Dual-mic cVc™ noise suppression
Battery life 7 hours (ANC off)

5 hours (ANC on) 

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10h (ANC off)

7h (ANC on)

Up to 35h total with case

7h (ANC off)
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5h (ANC on)

Up to 40h total with case

12 hours (ANC off)

Up to 8 hours (ANC on)

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Up to 42 hours total with the case

Up To 10 Hours (ANC on/off not specified)
Charging 10min quick charge = 2h playback USB-C + Qi wireless charging; 10min quick charge = 2h playback USB-C + Qi wireless charging; 15min quick charge = 2h playback USB-C & Qi wireless charging 10 minutes = ~2 hours playback USB-C; 17min quick charge = 70 minues playback
Personalization Not Indicated Audiodo per-ear calibration with on-device storage Audiodo per-ear calibration with on-device storage Audiodo per-ear calibration with on-device storage No
App Custom EQ, touch mapping, OTA updates, multilingual interface Custom EQ, touch mapping, OTA updates, multilingual interface Custom EQ, touch mapping, OTA updates, multilingual interface Custom EQ, touch mapping, OTA updates, multilingual interface Custom EQ, touch mapping, OTA updates, multilingual interface

The Bottom Line 

The Noble Osprey gives Noble Audio a more affordable entry point in true wireless without turning it into a stripped down budget model. For $199, the Osprey offers the styling Noble is known for, a hybrid dual driver design, ANC, Hearing Through mode, Bluetooth 5.4, Multipoint connectivity, app support, and a wireless charging case. That combination gives it a stronger identity than many wireless earbuds in this price range, especially for listeners who already like Noble’s tuning approach but do not want to spend FoKus money.

The tradeoffs are clear. The Osprey does not carry the FoKus name, and codec support appears more limited with no aptX formats listed, and no indicated support for Dolby Atmos or Spatial Audio. That matters because the $179 to $249 earbud category is crowded with models from LG, Beats, Sony, Status Audio, and aggressive value brands like SOUNDPEATS, which are pushing features such as LDAC, aptX Lossless, hybrid ANC, and app based EQ at even lower prices.

What makes the Osprey interesting is not that it wins the spec sheet war. It probably does not. The appeal is Noble bringing its design language, hybrid driver experience, and app supported true wireless platform below $200. The question is whether buyers in this range care more about Noble’s sound and styling, or whether they will chase the longer codec list and feature overload offered by lower priced competitors.

Price & Availability

The Noble Audio Osprey will be available for pre-order from nobleaudio.com and selected retailers worldwide starting June 4th, 2026, priced at $199 / £199 / €225. Shipping is expected to begin by the end of June 2026

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The Osprey launch will coincide with Noble’s appearance at HIGH END Vienna 2026, where attendees can try it out for themselves.

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