As announced, Turtle Beach is retiring the Roccat brand. However, many of the company's peripherals will remain under the Turtle Beach name, including products like the Vulkan II Keyboard, and the popular Kone and Pure mice, which will be re-launched under the Turtle Beach name.
Starting with the new peripherals, we have the new Stealth 600 wireless headset. The new Stealth 600 features a low-latency 2.4GHz wireless and Bluetooth connection and the brand's 50mm Nanoclear drivers. It's also rated for 80 hours of continuous use and has an AI-driven microphone noise reduction. Available in black and white for Xbox and Playstation consoles (the PC version is only available in black), the Stealth 600 will cost £99.99/$99.99/€109.99.
Turtle Beach is also expanding its popular wireless multiplatform Stealth headset series by introducing the new Stealth 500. This headset offers gamers low-latency 2.4GHz wireless and Bluetooth connectivity, an adjustable floating headband, and 40-hour battery life. Unlike the Stealth 600, the Stealth 500 is only available in black. Compatible with PC, PlayStation and Xbox consoles, this headset costs £79.99/$79.99/€89.99.
The last addition to Turtle Beach's headset line-up is the Atlas Air, the first wireless open-back PC gaming headset with 24-bit audio. The Atlas Air's precise 40mm drivers and open-back earcup design create a wider sound stage, with less of an ‘isolated' feeling while listening. The headset offers low-latency 2.4GHz wireless and Bluetooth connectivity with Windows PCs, PS5, PS4, Nintendo Switch, and mobile devices. Alternatively, it supports wired connections via a 3.5mm connector. The Atlas Air also includes realistic Waves 3D audio, a high-bandwidth 16kHz microphone, and up to 50 hours of battery life for $179.99/£159.99/€179.99. There's also a mod kit that includes a second headband strap and ear cushions in Pink, Purple, or Blue for the headset that costs £29.99/$24.99/€19.99.
Moving on to keyboards, the Turtle Beach Vulcan II TKL Pro Magnetic mechanical RGB gaming keyboard comes in a TKL format, equipped with magnetic Hall Effect switches for smooth key presses with a 150M click lifespan and an adjustable actuation point ranging from 0.1mm to 4mm. With the Rapid Trigger option, PC gamers have quicker, more accurate movement control with less downtime between key presses.
Turtle Beach's new Swarm II desktop software allows for customisation of per-key RGB, Aimo intelligent lighting, five onboard profiles, and analogue capabilities such as controller emulation and up to three inputs per key. The Vulcan II TKL Pro is available for pre-order in black or white for £149.99/$149.99/€159.99.
Lastly, we have the Turtle Beach Burst II Air wireless gaming mouse. Weighing just 47g, it features Turtle Beach's Owl-Eye 26K DPI optical sensor with 650 IPS (16.5m/s) tracking speed. The Titan optical switches allow you to adjust their debounce and have a 100 million click life cycle. The dual wireless connection includes low-latency 2.4GHz WIFI (up to 40 hours continuous usage) and Bluetooth (up to 120 hours), all housed in a right-handed symmetrical, solid top shell design. The Burst II Air is available in black or white and can be pre-ordered for £99.99/$99.99/€109.99.
Finally, Turtle Beach has re-launched several former Roccat PC gaming peripherals, including the Pure Air and Pure SEL mice, the Kone XP Air wireless mouse, the Vulcan II and Vulcan II Max full-size keyboards, the Vulcan TKL and Vulcan II Mini Air keyboards, and the Sense Aimo XXL mouse pad. All are now available for pre-order and will be released on May 19th, 2024.
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KitGuru says: Which of all the new peripherals from Turtle Beach looks the most interesting?