Pros
- Custom form-fitting tips provide a great feel in your ears and allow them to stay in place.
- Sound quality is excellent on either Bluetooth or Lightspeed (USB dongle) options.
- Great noise isolation.
Cons
- Earbuds do not automatically disconnect from a device when set back into the case.
- When using individual earbuds plugging the other one in does not automatically pair and start playing audio.
- Case continually dies when earbuds are fully charged and earbuds can not be manually turned on without the case having a charge.
- Lack of features like noise canceling or transparency modes.
- Mic is awful.
- Lack of ear tip sizes in the box alienates people who may have smaller or larger ears.
In Summary
I was so excited to try the G Fits but man, these disappoint on just about every level. The fact these are $230 USD without many of the same features as other earbuds in this price range have baffled me. Yes, these are meant to “gamer” focused earbuds, but I can use other earbuds that are cheaper and get a similar experience, and have more features to them. What’s even more frustrating is the case continually dies on its own and refuses to disconnect from a device when connected via Bluetooth automatically. You may be thinking “well the battery is dying because they are being used!” and the answer to that is no. I am manually going into my device and disconnecting them and verifying they aren’t connected and yet the battery on the case still is dead. I understand these are Logitech’s first higher-end earbuds, but these are a massive bump in the road I can’t in good conscience recommend to anyone at that price range. If you have that kind of money to spend and want a great pair of headphones I’d recommend the Astro A30s or the Logitech G735s over these. I do hope we see a version 2 sooner than later that fixes many of these issues and adds some much-needed features.