Seeing as this is quite a premium headset, with a price tag that's north of £100 wherever you buy it, it's no surprise that the packaging is premium too. The finish is a mix of matt and glossy cardboard, highlighting the titan and its pilot, along with the headset and logo imagery.
As you would expect, much of the box is covered in a variety of mulch-lingual features with a couple of pictures on the side showing off the Xbox One and PC audio adapter/amps.
This is easily the most accessory filled headset box we have seen. There are three separate boxes inside the main one, containing the Xbox One adapter, the in-line volume control and a bunch of documentation. You also get a detachable boom mic and a quick set up guide.
There's also come extra cabling, including a 3.5mm to twin-phono (red and white) cable, a 3.5mm to 3.5mm cable for Xbox controller connections and a USB to micro-USB converter cable.
There is so much paperwork with this headset. There is a set up guide for the Xbox One adapter, a warranty leaflet, a leaflet encouraging you to use Turtle Beach support, a large Titanfall sticker and a quick start guide that is thicker than most full manuals.
The inline volume control is only needed if you are using this headset with your PC or Xbox 360, but features a volume control for both microphone audio and game audio, as well as a mic-mute button and an input for an Xbox controller.
You input to it from the headset 3.5mm cable and it outputs to a single 3.5mm for the audio and a USB for the mic.
They be crushin my head!