Xear 3d Virtual 7.1 Channel Sound Simulation Software For Windows 10 [OFFICIAL]

Two years ago, my friend Leo built his first gaming PC on a tight budget. He spent most of his money on a good graphics card and a fast SSD, so he had to cheap out on audio. He used an old, generic headset—the kind that comes free with a smartphone—and plugged it directly into the front panel jack of his cheap case.

Leo opened the Realtek Audio Console (sometimes called "Realtek Audio Control" from the Microsoft Store). Hidden inside was the Xear 3D panel. It looked simple—just a checkbox for "Virtual 7.1 Surround" and a few sliders. He was skeptical. "How can software fake 7.1 speakers on my $10 earbuds?" Two years ago, my friend Leo built his

Xear 3D is not magic. It works best with (even cheap ones). It sounds terrible through speakers. And on some Windows 10 updates, the Realtek Console might disappear—if that happens, you have to reinstall the driver from your motherboard's support page. Leo opened the Realtek Audio Console (sometimes called

Un monstruo de mil cabezas

Two years ago, my friend Leo built his first gaming PC on a tight budget. He spent most of his money on a good graphics card and a fast SSD, so he had to cheap out on audio. He used an old, generic headset—the kind that comes free with a smartphone—and plugged it directly into the front panel jack of his cheap case.

Leo opened the Realtek Audio Console (sometimes called "Realtek Audio Control" from the Microsoft Store). Hidden inside was the Xear 3D panel. It looked simple—just a checkbox for "Virtual 7.1 Surround" and a few sliders. He was skeptical. "How can software fake 7.1 speakers on my $10 earbuds?"

Xear 3D is not magic. It works best with (even cheap ones). It sounds terrible through speakers. And on some Windows 10 updates, the Realtek Console might disappear—if that happens, you have to reinstall the driver from your motherboard's support page.


Publicaciones relacionadas