My one and only problem with the G933, and a reason for some of you to stay away: It’s tight. They’re big and goofy, despite Logitech’s improvements. But again, I wouldn’t wear these on the street. You can use the latter to plug the G933 into a phone, gamepad, or whatever-no battery required, though you’ll lose out on the lighting.
Rounding out the design, the bottom of the left ear has a micro USB charging port and a 3.5mm analog jack. Some of it’s strange and a bit overdone-like a scattering of decorative triangle shapes inside the headband-but for the most part, these changes help the G933 look more like a modern headset and less like a relic of the ’90s. The G933 ditches that enterprise look, and instead features a less obtrusive logo (and logo placement), as well as some decorative accents that give it a lighter aesthetic. The G930’s ears were particularly ugly, a flat slab of matte-finish plastic saddled with the old, very-corporate Logitech logo and some chunky controls. But it looks good, and Logitech continues to offer some of the best lighting in the industry.īut illumination aside, the G933 is simply a sleeker headset.
Like the rest of the company’s modern lineup, the G933 sports full 16.8 million color profiles for the strips of lighting on the rear of each ear and the lit-up logos on the facing sides. Logitech has added RGB lighting, of course. Nevertheless, the G933’s been prettied up.