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Audeze Maxwell 2 at CES 2026 — The Wireless Gaming Headset That Just Reset the Power Rankings

Audeze’s Maxwell 2 raises the bar for gaming headsets, featuring SLAM technology with improved sound, comfort, and a new control app.

Man wearing Audeze Maxwell 2 Gaming Headset Side Lifestyle

The Gaming Beast never sleeps—it just gets louder, more demanding, and far less forgiving of half-baked upgrades. In gaming audio, evolution isn’t optional; it’s survival. When Audeze dropped the original Maxwell in 2022, it didn’t just improve the wireless gaming headset category—it bulldozed it. Planar magnetic drivers, real battery life, serious wireless stability, and sound quality that embarrassed most “gaming” headsets at twice the price. Maxwell forced competitors to either step up or quietly slink back to RGB keyboards and marketing decks.

Fast-forward to 2026, and the stakes are even higher—especially with Audeze now operating under the watchful, well-funded eye of Sony. That acquisition wasn’t about dabbling; it was about scale, tech transfer, and planting a very sharp flag in gaming audio. The Audeze Maxwell 2 isn’t a routine refresh or a colorway victory lap—it’s one of the top high-end headphone brands swinging for the Grand Canyon. This is a statement product meant to remind the industry who rewrote the rules in the first place… and who now has the resources to do it again, louder and deeper than before.

audeze-maxwell-2-gaming-headset-with-playstation

Maxwell 2: The Headset That Audeze Built to Defend the Throne

Audeze isn’t calling the Maxwell 2 an “inside-and-out” upgrade for marketing drama—they’re setting expectations. This is a ground-up refinement of a headset that already reset the category. From the acoustic platform to ergonomics and wireless performance, every meaningful subsystem has been revisited with the goal of pushing fidelity, comfort, and platform-agnostic connectivity further than the original ever could.

For serious competitive gamers—and especially for those who want full-scale immersion without sacrificing accuracy—the Maxwell 2 makes a compelling case for upgrading. It doesn’t chase gimmicks or esports cosplay; it doubles down on sound quality, long-session comfort, and reliability across consoles, PC, and mobile. If the original Maxwell proved that a wireless gaming headset could sound legitimately high-end, Maxwell 2 is Audeze reminding everyone that “classic” doesn’t mean finished.

audeze-maxwell-2-gaming-headset-closeup

SLAM Technology and Planar Magnetic Drivers

At the heart of Maxwell 2’s sonic upgrades is Audeze’s patent-pending SLAM technology—a system designed to improve spatial precision while adding real physical impact to the low end. Rather than relying on DSP trickery, SLAM focuses on airflow and acoustic control, delivering more convincing positional cues and tighter, punchier bass response where it actually counts.

audeze-maxwell-2-driver-exploded-parts

First seen in Audeze’s 2024 flagship CRBN2 electrostatic headphone, SLAM now makes its way into the gaming space paired with Audeze’s latest 90mm planar magnetic drivers. These drivers incorporate the company’s patented Fluxor magnet arrays and Fazor waveguides, contributing to a wide 10 Hz – 50 kHz frequency response and exceptionally low distortion. The result is a presentation that’s engineered to reveal everything—from barely audible footsteps to room-shaking explosions without smearing detail or collapsing under pressure when the action peaks.

Wearing Comfort: Built for Marathon Sessions

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Comfort is a critical part of the Maxwell 2’s redesign, especially for gamers who measure sessions in hours, not minutes. Audeze has upgraded the suspension strap to a wider, more supple design with added ventilation to reduce heat buildup and pressure during extended use. The goal here is simple: consistent comfort without hotspots, clamp fatigue, or the slow creep of distraction mid-session.

The earpads have also been reworked, offering more internal space within the closed-back, over-ear design to better accommodate a wider range of head and ear shapes. This improves long-term wearability while preserving isolation. A new magnetic attachment system allows the earpads to be removed and replaced quickly, making maintenance and customization far less of a chore—because nobody wants to wrestle with adhesives when the match is about to start.

Microphone System: Because “Can You Hear Me?” Is Not a Skill Issue

Clear communication isn’t optional in competitive gaming—it’s infrastructure. Maxwell 2’s microphone system leans hard into that reality with an upgraded, AI-powered noise-canceling chain designed to keep your voice intact while everything else gets politely shown the exit. Audeze’s latest FILTER AI noise removal doubles the available bandwidth, improving separation and clarity without turning voices into robotic mush.

The removable hypercardioid boom microphone focuses tightly on speech, aggressively rejecting background noise from keyboards, fans, and roommates who apparently choose ranked matches as their time to exist loudly. Hardware-based volume controls keep adjustments immediate and reliable—no software digging, no dropped menus mid-round. The result is communication that’s clean, consistent, and actually useful, which puts Maxwell 2 firmly on the side of winning instead of apologizing.

Connectivity

Connectivity is another area where Maxwell 2 plays it straight and plays it smart. For serious gaming, the included ultra-low-latency USB-C wireless dongle delivers a stable, lag-free connection that keeps audio locked to on-screen action—no sync issues, no excuses. It’s the kind of reliability competitive players demand and casual players quickly take for granted once they’ve experienced it.

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For everything else, Bluetooth 5.3 expands Maxwell 2’s reach beyond the console or PC. Support for LE Audio and LDAC allows higher-quality wireless playback with compatible mobile devices, making the headset just as viable for music, streaming, and travel as it is for gaming. The takeaway is simple: Maxwell 2 doesn’t force compromises between performance and convenience—it’s engineered to handle both.

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Longer Battery Life?

Power is one of Maxwell 2’s headline claims, anchored by a high-capacity lithium-polymer battery rated for over 80 hours of continuous wireless use at 80 dBA. On paper, that’s a marathon—especially in a category where 20–30 hours is still considered respectable. USB-C fast charging further helps minimize downtime, making it easier to top off between sessions rather than parking the headset on a charger overnight.

That said, battery life in the real world is never one-size-fits-all. Gaming over a low-latency wireless dongle, running AI noise reduction, chat audio, and DSP, is a very different workload than streaming hi-res music over LDAC from a phone. Expect actual endurance to vary depending on how Maxwell 2 is used—and how hard it’s being pushed. The number is impressive, but how close most users get to it will depend on whether they’re grinding ranked matches, listening to music, or doing both at once.

Audeze App

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Software finally gets the same level of attention as the hardware with the debut of an all-new Audeze app alongside Maxwell 2. Designed with a cleaner, more modern interface, the app emphasizes speed, stability, and usability—three things gaming audio software has historically struggled to deliver consistently. Navigation is faster, settings are easier to manage, and customization no longer feels like a side quest.

Importantly, this isn’t a Maxwell 2–only affair. The new app also supports the original Maxwell, bringing its improved user experience to existing owners rather than leaving them behind. Platform support is broad, with native versions available for Windows and macOS, plus iOS and Android via their respective app stores. In other words, Audeze is treating software as part of the product—not an afterthought you tolerate once and then avoid forever.

Comparison

Audeze ModelMaxwell 2Mawell 
Product Type Wireless Gaming HeadsetWireless Gaming Headset
Price (Playstation)$329 $299
Price (Xbox)$349$329
Wearing StyleOver-ear, Closed-backOver-ear, Closed-Back
Diaphragm typeUniforceUniforce
Magnetic Structure. Fluxor magnet arrayFluxor magnet array
Transducer type.Planar magneticPlanar Magnetic
Phase managementFazorFazor
Acoustic managementSLAM
Magnet type Neodymium N50Neodymium N50
Diaphragm typeUltra-Thin UniforceUltra-Thin Uniforce
Transducer size90 mm90 mm
Maximum SPL>115dB>120dB
Frequency response.10Hz – 50kHz10Hz – 50kHz
THD<0.1%<0.1% 
Bluetooth 5.3YesYes
Bluetooth Codec SupportLE Audio, LDAC, AAC, SBCLE Audio, LC3, LC3plus, LDAC, AAC, SBC
Bluetooth MultipointYesYes
Wireless DongleUSB-C, ultra-low latencyYes
Wired connectionUSB-C digital, 3.5mm analogUSB-C with dual-audio endpoints and game-chat mix

3.5mm TRRS active
BatteryLithium-polymer, 1800mAhLithium-polymer, 1800mAh
Battery life Over 80 hours wireless playback @ 80dBAOver 80 hours wireless playback @ 80dBA
Fast charge.USB-C 5v 1.8A maxUSB-C, 5v 1.8 Amp max – 25% charge / 20min (Full charge 2hr)
audeze-maxwell-2-xbox-retail-packagejpg

The Bottom Line 

Gaming is no longer a niche—it’s a multi-billion-dollar global industry where audio quality, latency, comfort, and reliability directly impact performance. The original Maxwell didn’t just sell well for Audeze; it reset expectations by proving that a wireless gaming headset could deliver legitimate planar-magnetic sound, real battery life, and cross-platform flexibility without drifting into luxury pricing. Maxwell 2 builds directly on that foundation, refining what already worked and layering in meaningful upgrades like SLAM™ processing, improved long-term comfort, and a far more capable control app—without moving the price needle in a way that scares off its core audience.

Competition is real and increasingly serious. Sony continues to push ecosystem-driven gaming audio, SteelSeries dominates volume and mindshare, while Beyerdynamic and Sennheiser are steadily expanding their presence with products that appeal to competitive players who prioritize clarity and accuracy over RGB theatrics. And yet, the uncomfortable question remains: has anyone else delivered a wireless gaming headset that combines planar magnetic drivers, serious battery endurance, broad connectivity, and audiophile-leaning sound quality at this price? The answer, for now, is still no.

Does Maxwell 2 move the needle? Not by rewriting the category all over again—but by locking Audeze’s advantage firmly in place. This is a headset for gamers who want one solution that works equally well for competitive play, music, and movies—and who understand that good sound isn’t cosmetic, it’s functional. Success here won’t be measured in hype cycles or influencer chatter. Audeze and Sony will measure it in tens of thousands of units sold in the first year—and in how many competitors quietly rethink their next move.

Price & Availability

Maxwell 2 is available now. Both versions also support Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, and Nintendo Switch.

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