Test SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro “Max” (2025): the real assessment

TL;DR : There is currently no officially announced “Arctis Nova Pro Max” by SteelSeries. We therefore tested the current high-end reference, the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless (2025), which embodies what many imagine behind “Max”: ANC, base station, swappable dual batteries, and hi-fi audio for PC/PS5/Xbox. Verdict: an exceptional premium headset… at a premium price.

SteelSeries logo in black — brand illustration
SteelSeries: a flagship brand in premium gaming audio. (Logo, © public domain/Wikipedia)

Transparency note: no official announcement of a “Max” model is available at the time of writing. The performance and features below concern the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless and, where applicable, the wired version (GameDAC). It is currently the authoritative flagship.

Definition & context (2025)

Originally released in 2022 and regularly updated in colors and firmware, the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless remains in 2025 one of the most complete and accomplished wireless gaming headsets on the market. Its flagship positioning rests on four pillars: hi-fi audio (premium drivers and 360° soundstage via Sonar), ANC (hybrid, with transparency mode), universal connectivity (2.4 GHz + simultaneous Bluetooth) and base station with dual USB and hot-swappable batteries.

Gaming headset — illustrative photo (non-contractual). Source: Dinopkk, CC BY-SA 3.0/Wikimedia Commons.

Why many talk about “Max”… without a “Max” model

In the audio ecosystem, “Max” has become a buzzword to designate “the ultimate version.” However, at SteelSeries, it is the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless that holds this role. It combines ANC, base station, 2.4 GHz + Bluetooth mix, dual battery, and multi-platform compatibility (PC, PlayStation, Switch, Mac, and a specific Xbox edition). This is probably where the confusion comes from: in gamers’ minds, “Nova Pro Max” = boosted Nova Pro Wireless.

Key takeaway: no official “Arctis Nova Pro Max” to date — but the Nova Pro Wireless already ticks all the boxes of a “maximalist” model in 2025.

Technical sheet & key features

FeatureArctis Nova Pro Wireless (2025)
Drivers40 mm “Nova Pro Acoustic System”
Frequency response10 Hz – 22 kHz (wireless); up to 40 kHz wired via base/dongle (Hi-Res)
Impedance≈ 38 Ω (typical for the range)
Weight≈ 339 g
Wireless2.4 GHz (via Base Station) + simultaneous Bluetooth
Battery life≈ 18–22 h per battery (two provided); hot swap (Infinity Power System)
ANCHybrid, 4 microphones; adjustable Transparency
MicrophoneClearCast Gen 2, retractable, AI noise reduction
Base stationOLED screen, dual USB, charges one battery, input selection, quick mix & EQ
CompatibilityPC/Mac/PS/Switch (PS version); dedicated Xbox version available

The above figures aggregate data publicly provided by SteelSeries and specialized press (see sources).

Audio Quality & Soundstage

The Nova Pro Acoustic System signature focuses on balance: clean bass, a clear midrange (useful for voices/footsteps), and detailed highs without harshness. In Sonar (SteelSeries software), a granular parametric EQ allows fine-tuning per game/genre — handy to carve a notch around 250–350 Hz in FPS or slightly boost 2–4 kHz to highlight footsteps and reloads.

The 360° Spatial Audio provides convincing localization: credible lateral and vertical positions, with a coherent soundstage (few phase artifacts). On PS5, switching to Tempest 3D Audio is seamless.

ANC & Transparency Mode

The ANC (active noise cancellation) does not reach the level of a dedicated travel Bluetooth headset, but it effectively suppresses hums (fans, moderate traffic) and reduces noisy keyboards. The Transparency mode — adjustable — is excellent for keeping an eye on the environment (roommate, delivery, stream).

Audio electronics — illustrative photo (DAC/amp). Source: Benlisquare, CC BY-SA 4.0/Wikimedia Commons.

Microphone & AI Noise Reduction

The retractable ClearCast Gen 2 microphone delivers a clear and natural voice for chat. The AI noise cancellation algorithm (via Sonar) filters repetitive sounds very well (fan, clicking), while preserving intonation. For light streaming, it’s sufficient; for pro use, a dedicated XLR/USB microphone will still have the edge.

Connectivity & Base Station: The Key Asset

The Base Station is the “brain” of the system. With its two USB ports, it manages two machines/consoles and allows instant switching from the OLED (e.g., PC ↔ PS5). It continuously charges the second battery: you remove the one from the headset, insert the full one, and you’re good to go — zero downtime. The 2.4 GHz + Bluetooth mix allows game audio and a Discord/phone call simultaneously.

Desktop PC use: comfort and versatility remain central. Source: Lirazelf, CC BY-SA 3.0/Wikimedia Commons.

Sonar Software: EQ, Spatial & Profiles

SteelSeries GG / Sonar centralizes parametric EQ, Spatial Audio, noise gate, compressor, and game profiles. Official and community presets serve as good starting points. The interface remains clear and responsive; integration with the Base Station (shortcuts, backups) simplifies life.

Comfort & Ergonomics in Long Sessions

Suspension headband, generous ear cushions, moderate pressure: for medium to large heads, you can chain 3–4 hours without discomfort. Glasses pose no particular problem. Note: passive isolation is decent without being extreme (logical, given the ANC).

In the Field: FPS, Story-Driven, Multiplayer & Mobile

  • Competitive FPS (Valorant, CS2, Apex) — precise spatialization, clear footsteps, imperceptible latency on 2.4 GHz; the “Footsteps” EQ works wonders.
  • Narrative games (Horizon, Starfield) — wide soundstage, nice dynamics; ANC enhances immersion in the evening.
  • Multi/party chat — clean microphone; game/Discord mix via Bluetooth avoids hacks.
  • Mobile/on the go — decent on Bluetooth, but the main interest remains the home station.
Headset (historical illustration): in-game chat has been a basic requirement for years. Source: Evan-Amos, public domain/Wikimedia Commons.

Comparisons & serious alternatives

  • Razer BlackShark V3 Pro (2024/2025) — cheaper, very good microphone and strong battery life, ANC recently added. Decent spatialization, but no base station or dual battery.
  • Audeze Maxwell — very detailed planar sound and insane battery life, but heavier and no base station; microphone is reportedly improvable.
  • Astro A50 X — HDMI base for clean PS5/Xbox switch on the TV side; no ANC or dual battery, also expensive.
  • Arctis Nova 7/3 — excellent value for money if you don’t need ANC, a base station, or infinite battery life via swappable batteries.

2025 prices, availability & versions

In 2025, the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless typically sells for around $349.99 (PC/PlayStation version, sometimes a bit more for the Xbox edition). Occasional promotions can bring it below $320. It’s expensive; but you are paying for both the headset and the base station + dual battery.

The pros

  • High-end audio + parametric EQ (Sonar)
  • Base Station (dual USB) & swappable batteries — infinite uptime
  • Effective ANC + Transparency
  • Simultaneous 2.4 GHz + Bluetooth mix
  • Long-term comfort, clear microphone for chat

The cons

  • High price
  • ANC below the best “travel” headsets
  • Rich software = learning curve
  • Separate Xbox version (license), often costs more

Our verdict

If you wanted a “Nova Pro Max,” you already have it: the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless is SteelSeries’ “max” experience in 2025. Audio, ANC, base station, and dual battery make a unique ecosystem that’s hard to match. Recommended for players who want a single “do-it-all” headset, multi-platform, and are willing to invest.

Budget tip: if the base station and ANC are not essential, the Arctis Nova 7 (or even the Nova 3 Wireless) offers a family-friendly sound signature and modern features for much less. Are you a home audiophile? The wired version with GameDAC Gen 2 might be worth a look.

Examples & Use Cases

  • PC + PS5 setup: plug both USBs into the base, assign an input to each device, then switch via the OLED. Add your phone via Bluetooth for Discord.
  • Light streaming: ClearCast mic + AI noise filter in Sonar; light compressor (2:1), threshold −18 dB, gentle gate to cut keyboard noise.
  • LAN/competition: keep a full battery in the base; swap during breaks. Use an EQ preset “Footsteps” + slight 2.5 kHz boost.
Closed circumaural design: passive isolation + ANC = winning combo for evening use. (Illustration)

Tools, Settings & Alternatives

  • Sonar (SteelSeries GG): create FPS/RPG/Movie presets; test the Limiter (−1 dBFS) to avoid clipping when switching sources.
  • Quick EQ from the base: handy when you don’t want to alt-tab.
  • Alternatives: Razer BlackShark V3 Pro (cheaper, good mic), Astro A50 X (HDMI base), Audeze Maxwell (planar & battery life).

2025 Trends & Outlook

The premium segment is pushing towards polymodality (console/PC/mobile mix), increasingly mature noise cancellation, and advanced software customization (parametric EQ, shared profiles). Several media outlets are already speculating on what a “Nova Pro Wireless 2” might be: upgraded ANC, unified USB-C, and why not a compact dongle as a supplement. Meanwhile, the combination of Base Station + swappable battery remains a rare competitive advantage.


FAQ — SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro “Max” (2025)

What is the “Arctis Nova Pro Max”?

There is no official Max model. The name is used to refer to an “ultimate” version. In practice, the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless currently holds this role.

Does the Nova Pro Wireless have good ANC?

Yes, good for a gaming headset: effective on continuous noises and decent on office sounds. Dedicated travel headsets still lead in ultra-silence.

PC, PlayStation, Xbox… which version should I choose?

The PC/PlayStation (Multi-System) version covers PC/Mac/PS/Switch. For Xbox, you need the dedicated edition (Microsoft licenses/audio specifics).

How long do the batteries last?

About 18–22 hours per battery depending on usage (ANC, Bluetooth). Since there are two and you can hot-swap them, uptime is virtually infinite.

Is the microphone good enough for streaming?

For the occasional stream, yes (especially with Sonar processing). For a broadcast quality output, a dedicated USB/XLR microphone will remain superior.

Is there a wired version?

Yes: the Arctis Nova Pro (wired) comes with the GameDAC Gen 2. No ANC or batteries, but high-level conversion/amplification and zero latency.

Is it too expensive?

It is costly. But if you use base station + battery swap + 2.4 GHz/Bluetooth mix across multiple platforms, the value is real. Otherwise, aim for Nova 7/3.


Internal links (to go further)


If you play daily on at least two platforms and use the Bluetooth mix for Discord/calls, the Nova Pro Wireless investment is relevant. Otherwise, prefer a Nova 7/3 or a BlackShark V3 Pro to reduce the cost.

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