I’m thinking I’m taking this audio stuff way too seriously now.

Scene: I was editing my recent “Let’s Play Stellar Tactics” videos and I really did not enjoy the sound of my own voice. No one does, I suppose, as I hear that no one likes the sound of their own voice, but in my case I could identify some pretty specific issues with the recording.

Prime among them was an echo that is a result of my voice bouncing back to the mic from the wall behind my monitor. It’s not sound-proofed like it should be were I recording these videos on the regular and on the serious, so I guess I got what I paid for. I tried adding filters within OBS and that helped a bit, but for everything else that was still and issue my primary recourse was to “fix it in post”, and that turned out to be another flavor of problematic.

Naturally, I took the wrong lesson from this and started thinking that “maybe the mic is to blame”.

The first consideration is that I have a budget, and that budget is small. Like, $200 or less small. The second consideration is the difference between a condenser mic and a dynamic mic. I currently have the HyperX Quadcast which is a condenser mic, so I started looking into a dynamic mic. The third consideration was USB versus XLR; the Quadcast is USB because XLR requires a mixer in between the mic and the PC.

Initially, I looked at the Fifine Gaming Audio Mixer Bundle:

This is an all-in-one package which includes the dynamic mic and a basic mixer for $84USD. After thinking about it for a bit, though, I was wondering what I’d be getting for $84USD, really, and would it be significantly better than the Quadcast?

Next, I decided to look into more recognizable brand names, like the Shure MV6 ($169USD):

This is marketed as a “gaming mic” and while the Shure band is well known and respected, slapping a “for gamers” byline on a product from a company that makes studio-grade equipment screamed “we swept these components from the factory floor and put some neon colors on it to appeal to gamers”. I’m probably over-thinking it; however, the next step up, the MV7X, is one I’ve seen “in the wild” before:

It’s only $10USD more than the MV6 as of the writing of this screed, but it’s XLR only and doesn’t come with a mixer, which is an additional “mystery cost” as I’d have to source my own mixer of quality and I have absolutely no idea what the final bill would be in that case.

In my travels I came across a Reddit post in which someone said that software on the PC might be able to help, which made me remember that I have Steel Series’ Nahimic Companion app installed. I fiddled around with this and tested some OBS sessions, and I think I got things pretty OK; not perfect, but I think there’s enough going on now that I can tweak the mic audio in DaVinci Resolve for better results than I got from my more recent video.

Of course, all of this boils down to “how much does it matter”. Is this a problem that only I am hearing? I don’t have hissing or background noise, and I can reduce and even eliminate the echo by moving the mic closer to my face. The downside, though, is that I have to speak quieter than I had been, which results in me whispering much of the time. That’s not too exciting, though I’m not an exciting narrator on a good day. Still, I saved myself some money, and if I end up not making any more videos in the meanwhile, that’ll mean something.

Scopique

Husband, father, gamer, developer, and curator of 10,000 unfinished projects.

5 Comments

  • Tipa

    April 8, 2026 - 6:46 am

    Your image links are broken for me.

    • Scopique

      April 8, 2026 - 7:19 am

      Thanks for the heads up. This was posted from the Ulysses app and either that app or the way I was inserting the images wasn’t actually publishing the images correctly.

  • UltrViolet

    April 8, 2026 - 5:02 pm

    Random driveby because I’m _super into_ audio engineering in an unhealthy way: If your main concern is room noise or echo, you might consider a “hypercardoid” headset microphone, the kind that broadcasters wear in football stadiums. They reject most noise more than a couple inches from the microphone. Some are expensive, but I bought a $99 Audio-Technica PRO 8HEx Hypercardioid Dynamic Headworn Microphone a few years back and it works well for game videos. I can also recommend an Audio-Technica BPHS1 Broadcast Stereo Headset with Dynamic Cardioid Boom Mic for $239. It’s cardioid but when the mic is close to your mouth you get noticably less room noise (because you don’t need as much gain). There’s a Shure BRH50M “super” cardioid headset that’s really good too but it’s crazy expensive and I found the headphones a little tight and uncomfortable. They are all “real” microphones with good dynamic range and frequency response. As opposed to “gamer headsets” which almost universally sound terrible. Quality always depends on price, though, which is standard for microphones. Those headsets aren’t as good as condenser mics or the newer podcast dynamic mics, but the improvement in quality from getting rid of room noise at the source is well worth the slight decrease in quality of the microphone itself, in my opinion. Those are all XLR though, I don’t know if there are USB variants. Probably more than you needed or wanted, sorry. 🙂

    • Scopique

      April 9, 2026 - 6:37 am

      Excellent thank you! I’ll have to consider how far down the path I am willing to go; I would certainly pay more if I know that I’ll get a lot of use from a device either for a specific purpose or generally, so I’ll keep all of this in mind.

  • Elgato Wave Link and OBS – Scopique’s

    April 10, 2026 - 8:43 am

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