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Turtle Beach Atlas Air Review

An open-back gaming headset with great sound and plenty of airflow

4.0
Excellent
By Will Greenwald

The Bottom Line

The Turtle Beach Atlas Air is a rare wireless gaming headset with an open-back design that delivers detailed, natural sound.

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Pros

  • Well-balanced, detailed audio
  • Open back gives a good sense of space
  • Clear microphone
  • Long battery life

Cons

  • Lacks noise isolation
  • Relatively weak bass

Turtle Beach Atlas Air Specs

Type Gaming, Circumaural (over-ear)
Wireless
True Wireless
Connection Type USB, Bluetooth, Stereo 3.5mm
Water/Sweat-Resistant
Active Noise Cancellation

PCMag Best Products of the Year 2024 Badge The Turtle Beach Atlas Air is a rarity in an industry dominated almost entirely by closed-back gaming headsets. This $179.99 PC-focused wireless headset is of the open-back variety, which lets air pass through the earcups for more natural audio. The Atlas Air also has strong sound quality, a great microphone, and an incredibly long battery life, making it an Editors’ Choice winner. If you prefer the noise isolation associated with closed-back headsets, check out Razer BlackShark V2 Pro ($199), our Editors’ Choice winner for general midrange wireless gaming headsets. 


What Is an Open-Back Headset?

Open-back headphones sound more natural than traditional closed-back models and, due to the airflow, let you clearly hear everything around you. The trade-off? Zero sound isolation for blocking out distractions and generally weaker low-frequency oomph. Closed-back headsets dampen outside noises, feature more thump, and keep your tunes from leaking out, but you lose the more natural airflow and the audio balance that comes with it.

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Turtle Beach Atlas Air Side
(Credit: Will Greenwald)

Many audiophiles and audio professionals prefer open-back headphones for critical listening and mastering music, while closed-back headphones are designed for casual listening and recording. However, the Atlas Air won’t necessarily have the same accuracy as an open-back headset designed for music because gaming headsets aren’t typically tuned for a purely accurate signal. So you should decide whether you prefer an open, natural sound or beefier bass with less background noise.


Design: A Light, Comfortable Feel

The Atlas Air’s unique design is apparent as soon as you see its big, circular earcups. They float on springy bands like a microphone shock mount instead of being directly attached to the headband by a hard strut or pivoting hinge. This keeps the outward-facing metal grille's ring unimpeded by the headband or earcup back. The design also gives the cups enough flexibility to let them naturally rest against your ears, aided by the mesh-wrapped elastic suspension that stretches along the headband's underside. This flexibility is important because the Atlas Air doesn’t have many ergonomic adjustments; you can only tweak the tension of the headband's suspension using two small Velcro tabs.

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I have a fairly large head, and the Atlas Air fits comfortably without me needing to fiddle with the headband. The earpads are large and round, generously padded with soft memory foam, and wrapped in a breathable fabric. It helps that the headset feels quite light at 10.6 ounces, half an ounce less than the BlackShark V2 Pro and a full ounce less than the $329.99 SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless. This lightness is due in part to its all-plastic construction. On the upside, the plastic body doesn’t feel flimsy. On the downside, it lacks the sturdiness of a headset featuring metal structural elements, such as the Nova Pro Wireless. Still, it’s light and flexible enough to wear for long periods of time.

Turtle Beach Atlas Air controls
(Credit: Will Greenwald)

Besides the metal grille rings indicating the headset’s open-back design, the earcups' backs feature large discs with glossy finishes. The right earcup’s disc is just for show, but you can freely twist the left earcup’s disc, which control's the headset’s volume. The left earcup also holds all of the headset’s other controls and connections along the front and bottom edges, including power, source, and Bluetooth buttons; a USB-C port for charging; a 3.5mm port for wired use; and a short, hinged connector for the detachable boom mic. The mic is a capsule with a removable foam pop filter mounted on a flexible rubber arm that you can flip away to mute.


Platform: It's Mainly for PCs

The Turtle Beach Atlas Air is primarily a PC-oriented gaming headset intended for use with the included 2.4GHz transmitter. It also supports all major game systems and phones over a lower-quality Bluetooth connection.

Turtle Beach Swarm II software
(Credit: Turtle Beach)

Turtle Beach’s Swarm II software offers customization options and Waves 3D-based spatial audio. It provides a 10-band EQ with custom preset support and a separate mic EQ. It’s a fairly simple app that covers the gaming headset basics. However, it isn’t nearly as powerful as the SteelSeries Sonar software (compatible with the Arctis headset line), which features a parametric EQ and extensive, multi-source mixing controls for streamers.


Mic Quality: Good Mic for Making Recordings

The Atlas Air’s microphone is a massive jump over the cheaper Turtle Beach Stealth 600, both in design and sound quality. The flip-down boom arm is flexible (unlike the Stealth 600), so you can move it into an appropriate position for your head shape and how you speak. The microphone is clear, too. Our test recordings were free of noticeable fuzz and generally crisp without being sibilant. However, the test recordings also contained occasional volume dips, indicating overly zealous AI noise cancellation.


Sound Quality: Balanced and Natural

Fortnite on PC sounded loud and clear using the Atlas Air. I easily picked up nearby footsteps and distant gunfire, and the periodic music blasts demonstrated fairly strong bass. In addition, the headset’s Waves 3D spatial audio provided generally good directional imaging that let me discern the approximate area where a threat was located. The tech isn't as precise as the THX Spatial Audio on high-end Razer headsets or the 3D audio on headsets connected to a PlayStation 5, but it’s tactically useful. 

Turtle Beach Atlas Air wearing
(Credit: Will Greenwald)

The Atlas Air's design creates a good sense of space. It doesn’t improve the spatial audio imaging (and limits just how thunderous low frequencies can sound compared with closed-back headsets), but it's more open, natural, and less isolating.

In our bass test track, The Knife’s “Silent Shout,” the bass synth notes and drum hits reach just deep enough to provide a decent low-end presence, but they aren't palpable or head-rattling. In addition, the sound doesn't distort at maximum volume levels.

Likewise, Yes’ “Roundabout” sounds excellent through the headset. The opening acoustic guitar plucks receive a good sense of resonance and clean, clear string texture. When the track fully kicks in, the different elements in the busy mix get equal attention, with the bassline, guitar strums, drums, and vocals all identifiable and detailed. The default audio profile doesn’t have quite as much treble response as I’d like, but it’s still a very strong performance. You can boost the higher frequencies to taste in the EQ, but doing so takes away a bit of the treble's subtlety.


Verdict: A Top-Tier Open-Back Gaming Headset

The Turtle Beach Atlas Air is one of the few open-back wireless gaming headsets, but it's more than that. The headset is comfortable, offers a good sense of space, and has an excellent microphone, earning it our Editors' Choice award for open-back headsets. Its more airy sound doesn’t mean more accurate spatial audio imaging, so whether you prefer this over a closed-back headset will ultimately be a matter of taste. If you aren’t looking for an open-back model, check out the Razer BlackShark V2 Pro, which has many of the same advantages as the Atlas Air, plus PlayStation and Xbox options.

Turtle Beach Atlas Air
4.0
Editors' Choice
Pros
  • Well-balanced, detailed audio
  • Open back gives a good sense of space
  • Clear microphone
  • Long battery life
View More
Cons
  • Lacks noise isolation
  • Relatively weak bass
The Bottom Line

The Turtle Beach Atlas Air is a rare wireless gaming headset with an open-back design that delivers detailed, natural sound.

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About Will Greenwald

Lead Analyst, Consumer Electronics

I’ve been PCMag’s home entertainment expert for over 10 years, covering both TVs and everything you might want to connect to them. I’ve reviewed more than a thousand different consumer electronics products including headphones, speakers, TVs, and every major game system and VR headset of the last decade. I’m an ISF-certified TV calibrator and a THX-certified home theater professional, and I’m here to help you understand 4K, HDR, Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, and even 8K (and to reassure you that you don’t need to worry about 8K at all for at least a few more years).

Read Will's full bio

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