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Creative Sound Blaster Audigy PCIe RX 7.1 Sound Card with High Performance Headphone Amp

Creative Sound Blaster Audigy PCIe RX 7.1 Sound Card with High Performance Headphone Amp

byCreative
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Top positive review

All positive reviews›
Wavey Davey
4.0 out of 5 starsThe Creative Audigy Rx Sound Card is the best Creative card less than $125.00
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on September 10, 2014
The Audigy Rx changed the way I think about Creative audio products, somewhat, well...at least *some of them* anyway seem to be developing to be different products than those I'd been used to in the 2006-2012 time frame anyway. Although still somewhat burdened by massive software packages that goes with the hardware they sell (to wit, when I was using the Creative Fatality Titanium sound card prior to 2010 when I discovered Asus and other brands of audio cards, that card was blessed/cursed with almost 1GB of software panels, sound packages, and peripheral enhancements to the card, so much so that the card was virtually useless if one actually tried to *use* several of the sound panels at once!

So I leaned toward castigation when it came time to review/analyze and/or use Creative products prior to this sound card I'm reviewing tonight. The Audigy Rx is a much simpler system of performance and enhancements it seems, with a virtual array of control panels to the card that begs the imagination, however, these sound panels are much less intrusive and actually help the card perform vs previous experiences I've had with this company. or example, there's the EAX Studio, with multiple effect groups to use, of which I found the most helpful and defined was the simple graphic equalizer, itself with an array of effects and special tonal additions to the card's output.

Still, I found that I got the most out of the Audigy Rx by simply leaving the controls set to "Living Room", and having just a simple special effect or two going on, a slight reverb or vocal effect perhaps, in order to derive the best sound possible out of a plethora of choices. I tried out most of the complex control panels that are offered in the software package but discarded them all for the purity of the sound card itself, and left the enhancements to simple balancing of my speaker system (5.1/7.1 Logitech Z906 Computer Speaker System, with five satellites pumping out some 50+Watts of power each, a midrange for clear voice and high-instruments like guitar or upper register horns and strings, and a thunderous sub-woofer that can crank out wall-bending thumps and low register bangs with some 220W of power behind it (all RMS readings).

With those types of adjustments in mind, I was able to achieve fantastic effects and increases in the level of sound per musical component group in a recording, tape, or TV offering/BluRay movie rather than letting a crazy control panel take over and literally ruin the sound experience. If I indulged my constant fiddling with the system controls and actually *used* the Creative control panels that were available to try and balance or improve the music or sounds, I found myself fighting clipping and distortion of the worst order, just like with the Fatality sound card. Memories like that are not easily forgotten!

But the Audigy Rx has many great qualities going for it, and I count among them a finely honed treble and high note group of sounds, while the bass is strong, but somewhat subdued vs the previous cards I used from Creative, a very nice balance of effects! For those reasons I rated the Audigy Rx 4-Stars, and it deserves all of that and then some. Were it not for the inclusion of unnecessary control panels which could potentially damage one's aural experience with this audio card, I'd have rated the card 5 Stars, but still...it's a VAST improvement over the other Creative offerings that I have used prior to this card.

Much to my pleasure this card also embodies a very nice faculty for being able to push the sound up, up and away in the listener's experiential framework, and play music and live shows at much louder levels than one would normally associate with such things, and still maintain a very nice balance, ambience and verve. I might go so far as to say I think that this audio card is the creme de la creme of the lot of inexpensive audio cards from Creative, Asus, and others, and that it gets my "Kick arse" award for an inexpensive audio card being sold today! After all the price point of the Audigy Rx is somewhere around $60-$80, while the card actually costs just more than $65 shipped, a cool bargain in my book of tricks for audio cards. You might say that this card is Creative's turn toward more realistic and specifically less-enhanced audio cards, at least I can hope so, can't I?

They mean well, they just don't know how to straddle the balance between "great sound" and "excessive sound" it seems. Well, maybe with the tendency of this audio card to minimize the audio experience and let the music do the talking, such as a great audio card generally does, it signals that Creative has been listening to people's comments about their products after all...again, I can hope right?

I really do enjoy my bargain basement cost Creatvie Audigy Rx audio card over all others in this price range of say $60 to $110 or so, and I'm convinced that if you just simple do NOT indulge Creative's tendency to utility over-dramatic effects into music and other sounds that a computer can generate or enhance, and just simply take the sound and its message to a new and pure, easy listening sound effect device like other cards tend to do, and adjust accordingly!

Suffice to say I really *like* this card a lot, or I wouldn't have given it such a great write up and wasted my time, you dig? Creative really could use more lessons in humble-pie sounds and simplistic tonalities such as other great audio card manufacturers have and use. The alternative is to go back to where they were 4-5 years ago with their products just filled to the brim with special effects and tedious attempts at trendy and cool control panels, panels which did nothing but help ruin a great listening experience in my view.

I like what this audio card signifies for me with respect to Creative's contributions in the future of audio cards and sound...they can choose to make sounds better for the listener rather than bombard us with special effects, and ruin the output that their audio cards are capable of delivering, just like the Audigy Rx does WITHOUT indulging its control panels and special effects to the maximum levels. Take it easy, Creative, and continue to concentrate on improving sound rather than defining it in terms of all the special effects that you are capable of giving the listener. That is my advice to the company, and I hope that they take it and run with it.

Wavey Davey - 9-10-2014
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3 people found this helpful

Top critical review

All critical reviews›
Gregory A. Gielda
2.0 out of 5 starsNot exactly 7.1 - avoid this card if that's what you're expecting
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on August 19, 2019
So here's my journey to get to this card... and the results once I got there.
I build a new computer rig.
I get a set of true 7.1 headphones (Another nightmare as they sound rather poor, even with 7.1 content)
Headphones have a pretty common (Analog) connector set:
1 - Front connector (L/R) wire
1 - side connector (L/R) wire
1 - Rear connector (L/R) wire
1 - Center/sub connector wire
1 - Mic connector wire
(In a 7.1 system, the 7 = the main speakers (rear x2 side x2, front x2, center x1), while the .1 = the subwoofer - hence, 7.1 - in a 7.2 system you'd have 2 subwoofers)

I see my built in sound choice (Realtek) is only 5.1 - so I cannot plug in all connectors for the headphones and omit the 'side' connectors.

And it sounds awful - on board sound is functional, but noisy due to the motherboard not being isolated enough from the audio outputs - and computers are basically billions of switches toggling on and off for the most part)

So I buy the Xonar AE sound card from Amazon. True 7.1 outputs that match all of the above input connectors. Easy Peasy to connect on a 1:1 basis.

But - the drivers for the Xonar AE sound card are horrible - and even after disabling any other on board audio from my PC and uninstalling all other sound drivers but those that come with the card - it still drops audio resulting in 2-5 seconds of silence - then audio for an few seconds, then cuts out all sound again. Tried all fixes the Internet could supply me... for hours... No joy.

So, wanting my (rather expensive) headphones to work, I buy the Soundblaster Audigy RX shown here. I buy it because it's about the same price as the Xonar AE (That just isn't working for me) and claims to be 7.1.

I uninstall the old card and clean out all old drivers and related software.
The new Soundblaster is discovered by Windows, I install the drivers, and I should be off to the races!

A quick check of the 'quick start guide' that comes with this card - a fold out bigger than a US road map - shows me the audio connections so I'll know where to plug in my 7.1 headphone connectors.

And the 'fun' begins. (If by fun, we mean putting the 'fun' back in "DysFUNctional")

This sound card (SoundBlaster Audigy RX 7.1) has the following outputs on the back:

Front / Headphone Out (L/R)

Rear / Side R
(Huh? BOTH Left AND Right rear speakers on the same wire is normal, but also - only the right 'Side' output? How, on this card, is this signal different from the signal present in the rear speakers whose output it shares?

Sub / Center / Side L
(Huh? (Again!) The Sub and Center are usually on the same connection so that's fine - but also the left 'Side' speaker output? How is only the LEFT side speaker going to be sent information about the sounds one should hear out of it, when it is also the same signal as being sent to the center and subwoofer (Which aren't even stereo, technically)?

Microphone (It does give you two microphone jacks though - because why give you a connection for your SIDE speakers when you can instead have 2 microphone jacks?)

So doing the math - I have 5 connections on my headphones for 7.1 sound as noted at the top of this review. Discounting the mic, I have 4 'Input' connectors. (Center/Sub - Rear L-R, Side L-R, Front L-R). But this card only has 3 actual outputs on the back, with the 'side speakers' being mixed in with both of the rear speakers outputs, or the center/sub output - but only 3 physical jacks for this. Something does not add up...

If you were trying to plug this into an external amplifier, you'd expect outputs on the card to match inputs on your amp - but you'd be mistaken.

Since when is the signal that goes to your center channel the same signal that goes to your right side speaker? If wiring your stereo at home, would you connect your Right Side speaker wire to your Center channel output on your amp? No... that'd be... bad...

TL:DR - Bottom line, if you're expecting a true 7.1 output (With actual Left/Right for Front/Side/Rear) you will be sadly disappointed. The card WORKS without cutting out the audio (soundblaster clearly has better audio drivers) but it does not drive the 7.1 headphones that I have for it... because there are not enough outputs on the card to actually support a standard 7.1 implementation.

Given the importance of 'steering' when it comes to which sounds appear in which speakers during 7.1 content playback, having the two rear speakers mixed on the output channel with the Right 'side' speaker throws that idea out the window. Because according to the folks at Creative Labs (The company that makes the sound card) the Center/Subwoofer channel is the same as the left 'side' speaker channel... So how would I get a sound to come out of ONLY the left 'side' speaker? (The headphones have separate speakers for each channel within the ear cups). Where do the sounds that are ONLY present in the left side speaker in the recorded material, actually get played back?

Avoid this card if you are looking for true 7.1 output without any special speakers/cables/external processing. It may say 7.1 on the box, but it's not discreet outputs they're referring to. It's a disappointment. Save your money and buy a different card that actually provides true, discreet 7.1 output.
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Wavey Davey
4.0 out of 5 stars The Creative Audigy Rx Sound Card is the best Creative card less than $125.00
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on September 10, 2014
Verified Purchase
The Audigy Rx changed the way I think about Creative audio products, somewhat, well...at least *some of them* anyway seem to be developing to be different products than those I'd been used to in the 2006-2012 time frame anyway. Although still somewhat burdened by massive software packages that goes with the hardware they sell (to wit, when I was using the Creative Fatality Titanium sound card prior to 2010 when I discovered Asus and other brands of audio cards, that card was blessed/cursed with almost 1GB of software panels, sound packages, and peripheral enhancements to the card, so much so that the card was virtually useless if one actually tried to *use* several of the sound panels at once!

So I leaned toward castigation when it came time to review/analyze and/or use Creative products prior to this sound card I'm reviewing tonight. The Audigy Rx is a much simpler system of performance and enhancements it seems, with a virtual array of control panels to the card that begs the imagination, however, these sound panels are much less intrusive and actually help the card perform vs previous experiences I've had with this company. or example, there's the EAX Studio, with multiple effect groups to use, of which I found the most helpful and defined was the simple graphic equalizer, itself with an array of effects and special tonal additions to the card's output.

Still, I found that I got the most out of the Audigy Rx by simply leaving the controls set to "Living Room", and having just a simple special effect or two going on, a slight reverb or vocal effect perhaps, in order to derive the best sound possible out of a plethora of choices. I tried out most of the complex control panels that are offered in the software package but discarded them all for the purity of the sound card itself, and left the enhancements to simple balancing of my speaker system (5.1/7.1 Logitech Z906 Computer Speaker System, with five satellites pumping out some 50+Watts of power each, a midrange for clear voice and high-instruments like guitar or upper register horns and strings, and a thunderous sub-woofer that can crank out wall-bending thumps and low register bangs with some 220W of power behind it (all RMS readings).

With those types of adjustments in mind, I was able to achieve fantastic effects and increases in the level of sound per musical component group in a recording, tape, or TV offering/BluRay movie rather than letting a crazy control panel take over and literally ruin the sound experience. If I indulged my constant fiddling with the system controls and actually *used* the Creative control panels that were available to try and balance or improve the music or sounds, I found myself fighting clipping and distortion of the worst order, just like with the Fatality sound card. Memories like that are not easily forgotten!

But the Audigy Rx has many great qualities going for it, and I count among them a finely honed treble and high note group of sounds, while the bass is strong, but somewhat subdued vs the previous cards I used from Creative, a very nice balance of effects! For those reasons I rated the Audigy Rx 4-Stars, and it deserves all of that and then some. Were it not for the inclusion of unnecessary control panels which could potentially damage one's aural experience with this audio card, I'd have rated the card 5 Stars, but still...it's a VAST improvement over the other Creative offerings that I have used prior to this card.

Much to my pleasure this card also embodies a very nice faculty for being able to push the sound up, up and away in the listener's experiential framework, and play music and live shows at much louder levels than one would normally associate with such things, and still maintain a very nice balance, ambience and verve. I might go so far as to say I think that this audio card is the creme de la creme of the lot of inexpensive audio cards from Creative, Asus, and others, and that it gets my "Kick arse" award for an inexpensive audio card being sold today! After all the price point of the Audigy Rx is somewhere around $60-$80, while the card actually costs just more than $65 shipped, a cool bargain in my book of tricks for audio cards. You might say that this card is Creative's turn toward more realistic and specifically less-enhanced audio cards, at least I can hope so, can't I?

They mean well, they just don't know how to straddle the balance between "great sound" and "excessive sound" it seems. Well, maybe with the tendency of this audio card to minimize the audio experience and let the music do the talking, such as a great audio card generally does, it signals that Creative has been listening to people's comments about their products after all...again, I can hope right?

I really do enjoy my bargain basement cost Creatvie Audigy Rx audio card over all others in this price range of say $60 to $110 or so, and I'm convinced that if you just simple do NOT indulge Creative's tendency to utility over-dramatic effects into music and other sounds that a computer can generate or enhance, and just simply take the sound and its message to a new and pure, easy listening sound effect device like other cards tend to do, and adjust accordingly!

Suffice to say I really *like* this card a lot, or I wouldn't have given it such a great write up and wasted my time, you dig? Creative really could use more lessons in humble-pie sounds and simplistic tonalities such as other great audio card manufacturers have and use. The alternative is to go back to where they were 4-5 years ago with their products just filled to the brim with special effects and tedious attempts at trendy and cool control panels, panels which did nothing but help ruin a great listening experience in my view.

I like what this audio card signifies for me with respect to Creative's contributions in the future of audio cards and sound...they can choose to make sounds better for the listener rather than bombard us with special effects, and ruin the output that their audio cards are capable of delivering, just like the Audigy Rx does WITHOUT indulging its control panels and special effects to the maximum levels. Take it easy, Creative, and continue to concentrate on improving sound rather than defining it in terms of all the special effects that you are capable of giving the listener. That is my advice to the company, and I hope that they take it and run with it.

Wavey Davey - 9-10-2014
3 people found this helpful
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IW-2LT2
5.0 out of 5 stars Pretty decent for the price.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on September 6, 2022
Verified Purchase
I got this to replace tbe motherboard audio driver that I was having issues with. It's very basic but it has great sound quality, good features and gets plenty loud. I'm happy with it considering the price I paid. Been using it for probably a year now.
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Gregory A. Gielda
2.0 out of 5 stars Not exactly 7.1 - avoid this card if that's what you're expecting
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on August 19, 2019
Verified Purchase
So here's my journey to get to this card... and the results once I got there.
I build a new computer rig.
I get a set of true 7.1 headphones (Another nightmare as they sound rather poor, even with 7.1 content)
Headphones have a pretty common (Analog) connector set:
1 - Front connector (L/R) wire
1 - side connector (L/R) wire
1 - Rear connector (L/R) wire
1 - Center/sub connector wire
1 - Mic connector wire
(In a 7.1 system, the 7 = the main speakers (rear x2 side x2, front x2, center x1), while the .1 = the subwoofer - hence, 7.1 - in a 7.2 system you'd have 2 subwoofers)

I see my built in sound choice (Realtek) is only 5.1 - so I cannot plug in all connectors for the headphones and omit the 'side' connectors.

And it sounds awful - on board sound is functional, but noisy due to the motherboard not being isolated enough from the audio outputs - and computers are basically billions of switches toggling on and off for the most part)

So I buy the Xonar AE sound card from Amazon. True 7.1 outputs that match all of the above input connectors. Easy Peasy to connect on a 1:1 basis.

But - the drivers for the Xonar AE sound card are horrible - and even after disabling any other on board audio from my PC and uninstalling all other sound drivers but those that come with the card - it still drops audio resulting in 2-5 seconds of silence - then audio for an few seconds, then cuts out all sound again. Tried all fixes the Internet could supply me... for hours... No joy.

So, wanting my (rather expensive) headphones to work, I buy the Soundblaster Audigy RX shown here. I buy it because it's about the same price as the Xonar AE (That just isn't working for me) and claims to be 7.1.

I uninstall the old card and clean out all old drivers and related software.
The new Soundblaster is discovered by Windows, I install the drivers, and I should be off to the races!

A quick check of the 'quick start guide' that comes with this card - a fold out bigger than a US road map - shows me the audio connections so I'll know where to plug in my 7.1 headphone connectors.

And the 'fun' begins. (If by fun, we mean putting the 'fun' back in "DysFUNctional")

This sound card (SoundBlaster Audigy RX 7.1) has the following outputs on the back:

Front / Headphone Out (L/R)

Rear / Side R
(Huh? BOTH Left AND Right rear speakers on the same wire is normal, but also - only the right 'Side' output? How, on this card, is this signal different from the signal present in the rear speakers whose output it shares?

Sub / Center / Side L
(Huh? (Again!) The Sub and Center are usually on the same connection so that's fine - but also the left 'Side' speaker output? How is only the LEFT side speaker going to be sent information about the sounds one should hear out of it, when it is also the same signal as being sent to the center and subwoofer (Which aren't even stereo, technically)?

Microphone (It does give you two microphone jacks though - because why give you a connection for your SIDE speakers when you can instead have 2 microphone jacks?)

So doing the math - I have 5 connections on my headphones for 7.1 sound as noted at the top of this review. Discounting the mic, I have 4 'Input' connectors. (Center/Sub - Rear L-R, Side L-R, Front L-R). But this card only has 3 actual outputs on the back, with the 'side speakers' being mixed in with both of the rear speakers outputs, or the center/sub output - but only 3 physical jacks for this. Something does not add up...

If you were trying to plug this into an external amplifier, you'd expect outputs on the card to match inputs on your amp - but you'd be mistaken.

Since when is the signal that goes to your center channel the same signal that goes to your right side speaker? If wiring your stereo at home, would you connect your Right Side speaker wire to your Center channel output on your amp? No... that'd be... bad...

TL:DR - Bottom line, if you're expecting a true 7.1 output (With actual Left/Right for Front/Side/Rear) you will be sadly disappointed. The card WORKS without cutting out the audio (soundblaster clearly has better audio drivers) but it does not drive the 7.1 headphones that I have for it... because there are not enough outputs on the card to actually support a standard 7.1 implementation.

Given the importance of 'steering' when it comes to which sounds appear in which speakers during 7.1 content playback, having the two rear speakers mixed on the output channel with the Right 'side' speaker throws that idea out the window. Because according to the folks at Creative Labs (The company that makes the sound card) the Center/Subwoofer channel is the same as the left 'side' speaker channel... So how would I get a sound to come out of ONLY the left 'side' speaker? (The headphones have separate speakers for each channel within the ear cups). Where do the sounds that are ONLY present in the left side speaker in the recorded material, actually get played back?

Avoid this card if you are looking for true 7.1 output without any special speakers/cables/external processing. It may say 7.1 on the box, but it's not discreet outputs they're referring to. It's a disappointment. Save your money and buy a different card that actually provides true, discreet 7.1 output.
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mjbatman
4.0 out of 5 stars Good but some issues
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on March 23, 2022
Verified Purchase
I needed a new soundcard after my mb just stopped recognizing it's sound drivers. This works AMAZINGLY! So, what are the issues: The inputs are not colored or really labeled well. That means that if you have to unplug your devices, you kinda have to guess and remember which of the 6 ports is which. Not a big issue, but colored labels would've been great. Next issue. The outputs do NOT work on their own. So basically, while you have 3 output ports, you only can use them in 2.1/5.1/7.1 configuration meaning that your main output port is for your regular PC sound and the other 2 ports are for powered subwoofer and rear channel speakers. There is no option for normal Line Out function which is what I REALLY needed to use, and why I brought this one specifically. Third issue, I was not able to find a way to use the soundcard as a source of recording. For example, I wanted to record a MIDI sound file to a DAW, but the the card would only allow me to record from the MIC ports or the Line-IN port. Maybe there is a way to do this, but I spent about 2 hours trying to figure this out, updated the software etc and nothing.
OVERALL....if you need to record from a MIC, or sound source plugged into the Line-IN, You're golden. This will do the job. The sound is crisp and clean. NO issues on the sound, and I'm sure the surround would sound nice. However, for some of my needs it missed some of the marks. IN A PINCH...this is a good card. It'll do the job.
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RKingsroom
5.0 out of 5 stars Works Great!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on August 14, 2022
Verified Purchase
I paired this with a "Logitech Z906 5.1 Surround Sound Speaker System - THX, Dolby Digital and DTS Digital Certified". I wanted to have the use of the optical digital connection to the card.
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Alok Govil
4.0 out of 5 stars Best PC sound card for live performance with low latency, though with some issues
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on August 8, 2016
Verified Purchase
I was looking for a sound card for Karaoke sessions, and thereby requiring very low latency for a live performance. There are a very few sound cards with built-in ASIO support for low latency, another one being Creative Sound Blaster Zx PCIe.

Pros:
- Very low latency for live performance using analog mic inputs (not with USB microphones). (I did not get the low latency while recording sound using Audacity since Audacity does not support ASIO out of the box.)
- The software allows adding live effects (like auditorium) without impacting the latency. Further, I can apply the effect only to the microphone signal without impacting the music/song playback. This is awesome!
- Worked without issues on Windows 10 x64.

Cons:
- Quality control issues: The first card I received had excessively tight mic input jack, which was further dead. The second mic input worked, allowing me to test everything. Amazon happily replaced the card.
- Mic inputs support +20 dB boost. It does however add too much hiss. I am living with it since I could not find a better sound card for live performance. I may at a later point buy a dedicated amplifier for the microphone (Audio Technica ATR2100).
- It has too much static/interference from the graphics card, **whenever enabling the mic for a live session**. Whenever I would move the computer mouse pointer, or click, I heard static from the speakers. To learn more about static, just google the product name with added keyword "static". I am living with that just because I do not see any better product with low latency.
- My on-board audio connectors were color coded making it easier to connect the wires. This card does not do that. This is not a big deal of course since the connections need to be made only once. :-)

Notes:
- Live performance can be enabled by enabling mic in "Playback devices" or by checking "Listen to this device" for "Recording devices" in the Windows Sound panel settings. The former gives me inaudible latency. The latter still has higher latency because of the way Windows routes the sound signal through the computer.

Comparison to Creative Sound Blaster Zx:
- Zx had random noises even when listening to normal music playback. Can't believe! It could be a defective piece.
- Zx software does not allow choosing effects (like auditorium) at all, far from allowing it only for mic inputs like Rx does.
- Zx is nearly double the cost, without much benefit since the ACM that comes with it has its own issues as described by reviewers on the Zx product page on Amazon. I did not test the ACM module at all.
- Zx has a single mic input, while Rx has two. This allows Rx to be used for duets (I did not test). (Zx has one mic input at the back and two on the ACM as such. However, ACM connects to the mic input at the back taking it, and only one of the mic inputs on the ACM can be used at a time.)
- The sound effects available with Zx like Crystal Voice etc. are all fluke. I am more interested in hearing the sound as designed by the composers. Further, all of these features were introducing the latency back. Noise reduction was great (albeit it lowered the sound volume also), but it again introduced clearly audible latency.
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DeVante
5.0 out of 5 stars Better than motherboard audio.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on April 29, 2022
Verified Purchase
I bought a Creative Sound Blaster Audigy PCIe RX 7.1 Sound Card, to hear for myself if a dedicated sound card is better than the integrated audio on a motherboard. It makes a BIG difference in sound quality! If you are a PC user, then you should seriously consider buying one! Sound is so much richer and punchier than the integrated solutions, especially in games. I hear things that I couldn't hear before. The PC runs a little smoother also. This is due to the fact that there is a place for the computer to offload the sound processing. The aforementioned card is not top of the line, but I wanted to keep my initial investment low because this is new territory for me. No one really talks about sound cards unless they are audiophiles. I am toughly impressed! If your machine allows for hardware upgrades, invest in a dedicated sound card! Make sure you download the latest drivers from their website.
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Steve Zero
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent 7.1 Support
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on February 24, 2022
Verified Purchase
Bought this because the onboard audio ports just weren't cutting it for my old 7.1 Cambridge Soundworks speakers that Creative put out about 20 years ago. It came with a proprietary cord so I had already purchased some straight stereo cables to make up for that, but when I got this I realized it had a similar port setup to my old SoundBlaster Live! card. I then quickly realized that they went with a different proprietary cable for this which they don't sell separately. So I had to go buy a bunch of adapter cables to make this work instead. After all that it works beautifully.
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Jacob G.
5.0 out of 5 stars 100% worth the money
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on May 16, 2019
Verified Purchase
Is onboard good enough? Sure, for most people. Do you use headphones that cost any reasonable amount of money (like the Sennheiser HD 518s I have)? Then you can make use of this.

My motherboard uses the Realtek ALC892 codec. It's fine. It was night and day better than my old laptop's onboard audio. This was another night and day difference better than the Realtek ALC892. Even with an EQ, the Realtek audio couldn't come CLOSE to being as good as this card. Sound was muddier, tones weren't as well-separated, and weirdly, it seemed like the sound stage was smaller. I couldn't tell when something was behind me as well with it. This sound card cleaned everything up and (I still don't know why, exactly) opened up the sound stage.

The software for this card isn't amazing. It has a learning curve. It doesn't even have a graphic EQ. You need to use the parametric equalizer, which gives you proper naming for the volume (gain) and what frequencies you're affecting, and it only gives you four ranges to play with. But guess what? You get separate general bass and treble boost controls in your Windows sound settings on top of that. EQ not giving you enough? Crank up the bass. Not enough ear-piercing banshee tones? Turn that up. Too much of either? Turn them down. Those two things combined gives you just about the amount of control that the Windows equalizer does for onboard audio.

And then there's the fact that it's amplified, which is most of the problem with onboard audio even when it claims it has an amplifier. Keep in mind that I have particularly sensitive hearing. With my old laptop, my volume had to be set to 40 to hear much. Realtek ALC892? 30. This sound card? It's 10 when I'm not using an air conditioner, 12 when I am. My headphones have a 50 ohm impedance. God forbid you try to use ones higher than that without a sound card.

Now the issues: Not too many. Sometimes when waking my computer up from sleep, the EQ doesn't apply and I need to go into the software, switch to another one, then switch back. Not a big deal. Takes maybe 15 seconds. The card is also kind of ugly because it's a bare PCB with no backplate or front plate, but the PCB is black, so it can sometimes hide itself away. Aside from that, I can't think of anything wrong.

If you need an affordable sound card that'll actually work in a PCIe slot, one of these will do you just fine.
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David C.
5.0 out of 5 stars This is a quality soundcard.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on July 18, 2022
Verified Purchase
This is a direct replacement for a soundcard that died. I am happy with this card, which is why a bought another.
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