I'm new to the IEM market and want to get a good one for the first time, would the EA1000 or Chopin be better suited for gaming and music? For context, I use my Galaxy Buds2 Pro to play FPS and open worlds and for music I listen to EDM, Rap, R&B, and Pop.
@@ianfann why you say that? He asked a good IEM to buy, why should he waste money and buy several iems? Doesn't make sense (for me). Do you think a 200 iem is the same like a 20 dollar IEM?
@@f_society9151 No, I agree w/ him on this. It's a highly subjective hobby. Just having someone say a set is good isn't good enough to guarantee a newbie who has yet to discover their preferred sound signature and presentation would like something. (Say, someone recs a well-balanced set but the newbie is a latent bass head. Do you think he'd like it compared to what he had before even if the rec'ed set is technically superior? I don't. ) Better to try out a bunch of cheap IEMs in the sub $50 range to find what he likes first before moving up. Using your logic, why should he waste $200 on something he has no idea he'd like or not because he has yet to figure out what he even likes? Also, you'd only need like 3-4 to get a gist of your taste, and at >$50, it shouldn't be as wasteful as a single $200. Just as an example, I bought some KZs starting out and immediately found that I can't stand the boosted, peaky upper mids on heavily V-shaped sets. Heck, after trying some more, I could barely stand any boost to the upper mids (above 7dB pinna gain). Imagine I went in on a $150-ish V-shaped set right away.
@@f_society9151 in some way, yes and no. A 200 dollar set and a 20 dollar set will both sound good with similar tuning. And if you aren't used to hearing out for the details yet, it's almost identical. So by saving money and getting the cheap one, you experience the hobby at a more gradual rate. Getting cheaper sets will also allow you to try different tunings. But spending 200 straight away will get you right up to the diminishing return point of the hobby where you can try some of the best sets for the money possible. You get details, accessories, driver tech, and harder types of tunings like Harman mid bass scoop, smooth treble and separated bass.
I'm curios how they perform against the similarly priced zetian wu heyday.
Great review, Thanks! I'm sure they sound great.
Excellent review Ian,If Simgot would have priced this a little more competitively I would be more willing to try.
What would you choose this one or the Linsoul 7Hz Timeless AE for Apple Music with a Fiio dongle DAC? Thanks!
I'm new to the IEM market and want to get a good one for the first time, would the EA1000 or Chopin be better suited for gaming and music? For context, I use my Galaxy Buds2 Pro to play FPS and open worlds and for music I listen to EDM, Rap, R&B, and Pop.
i don't suggest that you splash so much money on your first iem, start with an iem that is below $20 and work your way up.
@@ianfannagree. Buy a cheap iem like a couple to test what signature you want before you blind buy
@@ianfann why you say that? He asked a good IEM to buy, why should he waste money and buy several iems? Doesn't make sense (for me). Do you think a 200 iem is the same like a 20 dollar IEM?
@@f_society9151 No, I agree w/ him on this. It's a highly subjective hobby. Just having someone say a set is good isn't good enough to guarantee a newbie who has yet to discover their preferred sound signature and presentation would like something. (Say, someone recs a well-balanced set but the newbie is a latent bass head. Do you think he'd like it compared to what he had before even if the rec'ed set is technically superior? I don't. )
Better to try out a bunch of cheap IEMs in the sub $50 range to find what he likes first before moving up. Using your logic, why should he waste $200 on something he has no idea he'd like or not because he has yet to figure out what he even likes? Also, you'd only need like 3-4 to get a gist of your taste, and at >$50, it shouldn't be as wasteful as a single $200.
Just as an example, I bought some KZs starting out and immediately found that I can't stand the boosted, peaky upper mids on heavily V-shaped sets. Heck, after trying some more, I could barely stand any boost to the upper mids (above 7dB pinna gain). Imagine I went in on a $150-ish V-shaped set right away.
@@f_society9151 in some way, yes and no.
A 200 dollar set and a 20 dollar set will both sound good with similar tuning. And if you aren't used to hearing out for the details yet, it's almost identical. So by saving money and getting the cheap one, you experience the hobby at a more gradual rate. Getting cheaper sets will also allow you to try different tunings.
But spending 200 straight away will get you right up to the diminishing return point of the hobby where you can try some of the best sets for the money possible. You get details, accessories, driver tech, and harder types of tunings like Harman mid bass scoop, smooth treble and separated bass.
Would you recommend this or the Gizaudio Chopin if you had to choose one?
This more fun
Nice nice
SIMGOT has a lot of good products, but...I don't think it's the design I want.
First😮
That pick there after 10khz..hmmm
The EM6L is better
these dude start to sound fatigue with these reviews.