Amazon.com: Customer reviews: Creative Sound Blaster Z SE Internal PCI-e Gaming Sound Card and DAC, 24-bit / 192 kHz, 116 dB SNR, ASIO, 600Ω Headphones Amp, Mic EQ, Discrete 5.1 / Virtual 7.1, Supports Dolby Digital Live, DTS
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Creative Sound Blaster Z SE Internal PCI-e Gaming Sound Card and DAC, 24-bit / 192 kHz, 116 dB SNR, ASIO, 600Ω Headphones Amp, Mic EQ, Discrete 5.1 / Virtual 7.1, Supports Dolby Digital Live, DTS

Creative Sound Blaster Z SE Internal PCI-e Gaming Sound Card and DAC, 24-bit / 192 kHz, 116 dB SNR, ASIO, 600Ω Headphones Amp, Mic EQ, Discrete 5.1 / Virtual 7.1, Supports Dolby Digital Live, DTS

byCreative
Style: With 11 Mic EQ Presets via SoftwareChange
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Top positive review

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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 starsIt seemed like a nice compromise between the razer sharp precision of ...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 3, 2017
The Creative Labs Sound Blaster Z Review

I bought this card for the sole purpose of taking advantage of SBX Pro Studio for Headphone. After listening to stereo mix versions of multiple HRTF formulas (CMSS3d, Dolby, Razer, Crap) I settled on going for this specific solution. It seemed like a nice compromise between the razer sharp precision of CMSS3d and cinematic fullness of Dolby Headphone.

Upon testing SBX Pro Studio through multiple headphones the surround sound was impeccable. It is very accurate, without having harsh tones and dead spots that you get with even CMSS3d in certain situations. The game audio is not particularly impacted in a negative way, playing Nier which part of the experience is auditory and musical it still sounded quite great. There was a fullness in the sound stage, without having any negative effect on its deadly accurate positional cues. In a game like Counter-Strike Go I found myself catching people to my back and sides at the exact angle they shot at me from. Rather then having a rough idea, I felt as if I was enveloped by a believable 3d space.

I had the Sound Blaster Z output a stereo mix through Optical output to my USB dac, and it imparted no noise or nasty oddities.

In short, if you're a gamer looking for great surround sound capabilities through headphones this is probably the best card for you. If you are an audiophile, or music affectionado then you probably own a USB dac already with optical spdif input. This card benefits you by providing you with the surround sound processing for games as well as the high Digital to Analog fidelity of your current headphone audio system. So it most definitely is not a waste if you buy this card solely for gaming as either group, unless you don't enjoy SBX Studio.

As a gaming card it does its job. Seriously gets a 10/10 if all you care about is this functionality.

The digital input while only 2.0 is also good, clean and low latency. I tested this out with my Playstation 4 connected to my sound blaster Z. While it would be great if you could get use SBX Studio Pro, it basically acts similar to a switch. Except if you wanted to play with your PS4 while using PC Discord on the same pair of headphones it is /very/ possible and perhaps one of the best reason to use it.

---That ends the good things about this card. ---

The microphone input is one of the worst i've had the displeasure of plugging my microphone into. It was more of a curiosity thing since I own a cheap USB dongle for my headset mic. There is a considerable amount of static on the input, with or without microphone boost. None of the settings seem to really make things better, for instance noise cancellation severely degrades the audio quality while eliminating most of the noise from interference.

The only redeeming factor of the microphone input is Crystal Voice, so everyone can bring out the inner Alien in themselves. That said if you're going to get this card, investing in a $10 USB soundcard dongle w/ mic input is highly recommended.

Since I started writign this review and holding it here for a later date I had an opportunity to try the Dac/Amp from the headphone output over a fairly extended period of time. (problems with my USB device)

The amp on the headphone output is fairly weak, and while in most cases you can get more then enough volume out of a song, and video. There are some where not even 100% windows volume can you elevate the volume to get a desired level. In games it hasn't been a problem because they generally run much louder then anything else.

The output is not destroyed by interference of any kind (I guess these components have better shielding or are higher quality then the mic section). With no audio, or slow audio there is no discernable noise being generated by the card through my headphones. The result is clean sounding audio. Despite the circuitry being well designed in my case, the DAC itself has poor to average audio quality.

Slower, or even sounding music sounds about decent enough. There is a warm veil that you tend to get from cheap dacs but its not an overbearing loss of resolution if you're going from a $70-$150 USB dac. Where the problems start is when the energy of a song starts to r ise, especially those with fairly heavy bass. The sound card looses all of its coherence, as if it is struggling to keep up with the song. Voices become a bit wobbly in some songs, and you can tell there is a fairly poor cut off in frequencies the lower and higher you get. This card does not do Music good at all over its analog headphone output. If you get this card merely to listen to music you will be gravely disappointed. That said ignorance is bliss, but even so the problems it has are immediately obvious.

I never tried the included Microphone as I have a far better mic attached to my headphones, and no 5.1 speaker system.

-----------

All in all its one of the most amazing sound cards for gaming if SBX Studio tickles your fancy (check youtube). But for everything else it is terrible and your dollar can go further.

I gave this card a perfect rating because of how it handles its main job of providing believable HRTF through SBX Studio. Especially when you pair it with a better outboard dac then the one inside of the card. For those that have more expensive, higher end equipment you will reap its benefits.

If you want a general purpose sound card plus amplified headphone output then this card is an absolute miss and you should ignore the rating. It is terrible for general usage. If you want a good microphone input, look to be paying an extra $10 for a USB Dongle.

Edit:

Quick edit, even for the discerning audiophile the crystallizer and bassboost on SBX studio is incredibly fun to use. Even while using the sound cards dac. The dac is pretty bad still but the sound is 'fun' with all the processing. The bassboost is not as detrimental as other software solutions.
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Terrorgod
3.0 out of 5 starsStill tweaking it, but first impressions are mediocre.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 17, 2021
TLDR: Its a good card with decent features but tries to entice you with gimmicks rather than its strengths.

As someone who still uses soundcards in 2021, I feel like the use case needs to be defined as we are a relatively niche crowd. I use mine as I needed extra audio jacks that my motherboard just doesn't have the required ports, ended up liking the headphone amp, and extra control the software provides when switching between the 2 devices. I decided to buy a Sound Blaster Z after my Recon3D Fatal1ty started creating static with my new gpu when it went to max power and no amount of troubleshooting between switching ports, different cables, reinstalling drivers was fixing it. I loved the simple and seemless control that software had brought me and the audio quality was good enough for me that I had 0 complaints until it started humming. The Sound Blaster Z seemed like an absolute upgrade using the same chip, just more or enhanced features, and after doing some research the Z and Z SE seemed to be identical with only software changes, so I opted for the Z as it was slightly cheaper open box and came with a microphone which I wanted to try out as mine is cheap (saddly in the very little testing I have done it hasn't been comparing well).
Installation was simple, just uninstalled the old cards drivers, plopped it in a PCIe slot and it went to the races, the software makes you restart a few times to install it, and once its all in you are given the Sound Blaster Command center. As with every new piece of software, it saddly wants you to sign into an account, and instead of just having decent standard settings it has a ton of profiles which I am not a huge fan of. I should have made marks at what the Recon3D was doing at default, because everything sounds different which was a little jarring as I was hoping for just a more refined sound to what I was used to noting its the same processor etc, but the profiles are really overkill. Smart Volume had me going nuts in voice chats as it would practically silence the game for me to listen to someone talk and this was on by default (I think the old card has this feature but it was off unless I wanted it). To get some semblence of normality, turning Surround and Crystalizer up to 50 (and bass for headphones) sounds ok, leave smart volume and Dialog+ off, I can't think of a good use case for those features unless you really wanted to pick out voices in a poorly created game/movie. I haven't touched the equalizer yet either and just leave it on Flat as I am unsure what my old preferences were but once I did the first changes it sounded a good bit better.
Overall I can say the card does work, the Z seems to have all the updates the SE got and it even pops up as a SE in the devices section of the software (while it still says Z in the top left). I wouldn't worry about getting a Z over a SE as the mic doesn't seem to be very good unless you are in a very silent room or have a lot of time to tweak something that probably doesn't produce good results anyway (it auto focused on my computer fans the second I stopped talking creating very bad noises). The static I heard through the other card during GPU load is also gone when switching to this card, so I'll keep it however I can't give it a good rating as I am a bit unhappy about having to make an account for something that should be just simple audio control software. I also experience some bugs when utilizing the instant switch between speakers and headphones as I have to reselect the audio device in discord even though it doesn't change otherwise I won't hear the other call participants. It's a good card with great IO (even has optical out/in which I forgot to mention is a great way to feed game consoles through your PC audio) but plagued with all the partnership profiles or gimmicky features that I'm left underwhelmed.
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From the United States

Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars It seemed like a nice compromise between the razer sharp precision of ...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 3, 2017
Style: With Beam Forming MicrophoneVerified Purchase
The Creative Labs Sound Blaster Z Review

I bought this card for the sole purpose of taking advantage of SBX Pro Studio for Headphone. After listening to stereo mix versions of multiple HRTF formulas (CMSS3d, Dolby, Razer, Crap) I settled on going for this specific solution. It seemed like a nice compromise between the razer sharp precision of CMSS3d and cinematic fullness of Dolby Headphone.

Upon testing SBX Pro Studio through multiple headphones the surround sound was impeccable. It is very accurate, without having harsh tones and dead spots that you get with even CMSS3d in certain situations. The game audio is not particularly impacted in a negative way, playing Nier which part of the experience is auditory and musical it still sounded quite great. There was a fullness in the sound stage, without having any negative effect on its deadly accurate positional cues. In a game like Counter-Strike Go I found myself catching people to my back and sides at the exact angle they shot at me from. Rather then having a rough idea, I felt as if I was enveloped by a believable 3d space.

I had the Sound Blaster Z output a stereo mix through Optical output to my USB dac, and it imparted no noise or nasty oddities.

In short, if you're a gamer looking for great surround sound capabilities through headphones this is probably the best card for you. If you are an audiophile, or music affectionado then you probably own a USB dac already with optical spdif input. This card benefits you by providing you with the surround sound processing for games as well as the high Digital to Analog fidelity of your current headphone audio system. So it most definitely is not a waste if you buy this card solely for gaming as either group, unless you don't enjoy SBX Studio.

As a gaming card it does its job. Seriously gets a 10/10 if all you care about is this functionality.

The digital input while only 2.0 is also good, clean and low latency. I tested this out with my Playstation 4 connected to my sound blaster Z. While it would be great if you could get use SBX Studio Pro, it basically acts similar to a switch. Except if you wanted to play with your PS4 while using PC Discord on the same pair of headphones it is /very/ possible and perhaps one of the best reason to use it.

---That ends the good things about this card. ---

The microphone input is one of the worst i've had the displeasure of plugging my microphone into. It was more of a curiosity thing since I own a cheap USB dongle for my headset mic. There is a considerable amount of static on the input, with or without microphone boost. None of the settings seem to really make things better, for instance noise cancellation severely degrades the audio quality while eliminating most of the noise from interference.

The only redeeming factor of the microphone input is Crystal Voice, so everyone can bring out the inner Alien in themselves. That said if you're going to get this card, investing in a $10 USB soundcard dongle w/ mic input is highly recommended.

Since I started writign this review and holding it here for a later date I had an opportunity to try the Dac/Amp from the headphone output over a fairly extended period of time. (problems with my USB device)

The amp on the headphone output is fairly weak, and while in most cases you can get more then enough volume out of a song, and video. There are some where not even 100% windows volume can you elevate the volume to get a desired level. In games it hasn't been a problem because they generally run much louder then anything else.

The output is not destroyed by interference of any kind (I guess these components have better shielding or are higher quality then the mic section). With no audio, or slow audio there is no discernable noise being generated by the card through my headphones. The result is clean sounding audio. Despite the circuitry being well designed in my case, the DAC itself has poor to average audio quality.

Slower, or even sounding music sounds about decent enough. There is a warm veil that you tend to get from cheap dacs but its not an overbearing loss of resolution if you're going from a $70-$150 USB dac. Where the problems start is when the energy of a song starts to r ise, especially those with fairly heavy bass. The sound card looses all of its coherence, as if it is struggling to keep up with the song. Voices become a bit wobbly in some songs, and you can tell there is a fairly poor cut off in frequencies the lower and higher you get. This card does not do Music good at all over its analog headphone output. If you get this card merely to listen to music you will be gravely disappointed. That said ignorance is bliss, but even so the problems it has are immediately obvious.

I never tried the included Microphone as I have a far better mic attached to my headphones, and no 5.1 speaker system.

-----------

All in all its one of the most amazing sound cards for gaming if SBX Studio tickles your fancy (check youtube). But for everything else it is terrible and your dollar can go further.

I gave this card a perfect rating because of how it handles its main job of providing believable HRTF through SBX Studio. Especially when you pair it with a better outboard dac then the one inside of the card. For those that have more expensive, higher end equipment you will reap its benefits.

If you want a general purpose sound card plus amplified headphone output then this card is an absolute miss and you should ignore the rating. It is terrible for general usage. If you want a good microphone input, look to be paying an extra $10 for a USB Dongle.

Edit:

Quick edit, even for the discerning audiophile the crystallizer and bassboost on SBX studio is incredibly fun to use. Even while using the sound cards dac. The dac is pretty bad still but the sound is 'fun' with all the processing. The bassboost is not as detrimental as other software solutions.
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Travis M. Bruno-Erck
5.0 out of 5 stars Finally a worth upgrade from X-Fi
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 20, 2012
Style: With Beam Forming MicrophoneVerified Purchase
System setup (keep in mind I'm using high end setup):
Denon AVR 3D receiver
Klipsch 5.1 Quintet Speker system
SoundBlaster Z
Windows 8 Professional
16hih DDR3
AMD 8120 8 core processor
Samsung SSD 830 256HB
Gigabyte 990FXA UD3
Geforce 660 Ti
Vizio 3D LED 42" TV
Corsair TX850W Power supply

As a an avid audiophile user myself I love details and clarity. I usually upgrade every 2 years but after owning a X-Fi Titanium fatality I couldn't find a reason to upgrade since the sound quality was top notch in my opinion. I saw the recon3D came out and passed it on by as it didn't appear by reviews nor users seemed to be really happy about it. I figured I would be with the X-Fi for some time. I was mistaken as after seeing the features of the SoundBlaster Z and the price point I couldn't refuse. But my expectation were low.

I couldn't be more wrong. I have it paired up with a 5.1 Klipsh Quintet system and a newer Denon AVR 3D receiver. With this setup and the much improved signal to noise ration rated at 116db it was more than noticeable with my setup of the vastly improved quality of the SoundBlaster Z. When I hear the audio come through using the DTS and Dolby Digital through the optical link my mouth hit the floor. INCREDIBLE! I heard sounds that I thought the X-Fi put through clearly and the Z just blew it out of the water. The clarity, the range certainly paired up with my Denon and Klipsch speakers is getting the full benefits of it all now. My system was held back by the X-Fi inferior processing and quality.

Your going to hear that there isn't much improvement over X-Fi and that's ridiculous as the reviewers obviously didn't test it on a high fidelity setup where your going to more than notice it. The Dolby Digital EX and DTS Neo sounds awesome.
Gaming has been taking into a new dimension. The scout mode is flawless. With my Chimera 5.1 5.8ghz Razer headset I can hear exactly where the steps and shots are coming from. Up, down, right or left I can respond much faster using the scout mode and it's vibrant and clear. Furthermore,comparing this to the onboard audio just isn't even a comparison. Gigabyte touts nice audio from the Azalia but the SoundBlaster just puts it to complete shame. The difference is so astounding you'll see just how much junk the motherboard maker puts on the motherboard. It's painful now to listen to the onboard audio. If you think the onboard audio is good enough think again. Creative claims its 33 times better. After you hear it you'll agree with that statement.

Another aspect is the beam forming microphone. Finally, out goes the mono microphone and it's so small and with the design on it easily fits on top of my 42" LED 3D TV. It's an incredible microphone as I'm 10 feet away from the TV and in a normal voice it picks me up and my friends through chat can hear me just fine. I also have a Windtunnel fan in my room that really makes a lot of noise. They can't hear it! I'm impressed as I would always have turned off the fan as it introduced noise. Furthermore, I use Dragon Naturally Speaking 12 Premium and that accuracy rate is definitely improved on the Z. At 10 feet away from the mic I can speak normal and it never misses a word and auto corrections significantly reduced. Again, the soundblaster Z shines through here.

And as a final note this was used on windows 8 pro. And as some of you may find out the Dolby Digital Live and DTS Neo doesn't work with the X-fI drivers from Creative any longer. This issue is now functional as the drivers included off the disc work right out of the box. And that brings up another nice point. Creative has unbloated the software. It's not so bloated that it bogs your system resources down and takes a long time to install. It's apparent to me they designed this card from the bottom up. So far all the featuers work. I've used the EQ and it's nice, scout mode, special effects. And saving the custom profiles work just fine. I haven't experienced any crashing on Windows 8 at all and the drivers and software seem fairly stable. The receiver picks up the Dolby and the DTS and instantly switches mode without a hitch. It's rock solid and not bloated and much more simplified interface than in the past. My favorite feature is the switch to go from headphone to my speakers instantly. That was a well needed feature.

My favorite thing about the Z? Everything. It surpassed my expectations as I didn't exptect much over my X-fi Titanium and I wouldn't dare send this back after hearing it I just can't give it up. It was a worthy upgrade over my X-Fi Titanium Fatality. The Dolby Digital Live and DTS Neo work flawlessly through the optical connected to my Denon receiver and Chimeria 5.1 headset. What an amazing audio and gaming experience. Just incredible.....just keep in mind without a setup like mine with higher quality receiver and speakers you won't hear the full benefit. But the SoundBlaster Z left with me a smile on my face and now I feel like Im getting the money I paid into this high end sound system. It was the sound card as the bottle neck the whole time and the Z just fixed that. Impressive. Creative deserves the highest marks for this card and for those with similar setups I urge you that you won't be unhappy with the upgrade coming from an X-Fi. The reviewers said it wouldn't be much difference. They didn't test it on a higher end system. They couldn't be more wrong about it get it and find out for yourself. I'll put my reputation on the line in this review that you won't be sorry you did or you'll ding me for if the review helped you or not.
Go for it you'll hear it don't take my word for it. Your going to love what you hear. Just amazing!
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W. Chico
5.0 out of 5 stars Way better than some reviews imply...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 11, 2022
Style: With Beam Forming MicrophoneVerified Purchase
Bought this in 2020 even though it was considered "old" tech by some already. Built an all AMD computer Ryzen 5 3700x with 16g ram and Radeon 5700xt Win 10, I'm not a gamer but this can still run anything on the market to date. I hooked the computer up to 75" 4k tv via hdmi and have two smaller 4" powered speakers that I ran the soundcard to through optical cable. The speakers have a sub out so I plugged in a 10" sub to those. Installed software and configured it, which is probably the biggest pain of the entire setup as it isn't the most user friendly. Updated the software on 6/10/22 and it still works great. Chose to use the dts neo pc sound option and..... this very small and inexpensive system gives quite the dynamic simulated surround sound performance. WAY wider than the tv and speaker placement and better than any soundbar. I'm tired of reading bad reviews about a card that seriously outperforms many others and in the $100 range as well. As far as optical goes, you're only going to get 24bit/96khz max out of that configuration but you can't hear that well anyway unless you're a bat. The actual hardware in the card can produce sounds you can't even physically hear. I have no problems with artifact noise or popping. Creative continues to update the drivers and the control software for this card, its not been left behind by any means. Heres the bottom line... it sounds fantastic after you configure it properly and that may or may not be time consuming but after you do this you don't have to touch it. I haven't powered off my computer in two years, card is still perfect. Creative is doing their customers justice and when I build my next pc I'll put in another Creative soundcard.
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Amir S
5.0 out of 5 stars Makes a legitimate difference with good speakers
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 16, 2022
Style: With 11 Mic EQ Presets via SoftwareVerified Purchase
Pair this with some good PC speakers, like the Logitech Z623 2.1 and you're golden. A massive increase in sound quality and everything sounds more alive. Make sure to select the proper speaker output in the Sound Blaster control panel, it defaults to 5.1 and that doesnt sound great on 2.1 speakers.
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Steve Cherry
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Step Up From On-Board Sound
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 23, 2014
Style: With Beam Forming MicrophoneVerified Purchase
I don't review a lot of things that I purchase, but I felt that I had to give this item a shout out. I've been using on-board sound for the last 10 years or so (sad, right), but it seemed to be "OK" for my purposes. I play some games, I listen to some music, and I watch movies and such on my computer. For the most part, I couldn't complain about on-board sound because it did what I wanted it to do and satisfied my purposes. I remember when I was a child my dad had a gaming rig (this was back in the mid 90's, so we're talking a quote on quote "gaming rig") which came with an old school creative labs sound blaster card. Back then, the cards weren't near the technology level we are at now, but I clearly remember my dad saying sometimes how much he loved his sound card (which didn't make much sense to me at the time), so I decided to give it a shot.

The original reason that I purchased this card was because I got a couple amazon gift cards for my birthday and decided that I would give it a shot, and partly because it seemed to me like my on-board sound was giving out, and I didn't want to pony up the cash for another motherboard and have to take everything out of the old one and put it into the new one. By giving out, I mean that it seemed like it was playing sounds quieter than it used to and there seemed to be some anomalies being introduced into the sound, such as some crackling and such. Not enough to cause worry, but a little annoying. For a bit of background info on my sound setup: using an Asus motherboard, although I got it probably 6 or 7 years ago, and I have a pair of decent quality turtle beach headphones.

The first thing I noticed after getting it set up: massive increase in simple volume. You don't quite realize how important this is until you have all your volume sliders set to 100% and you're still wishing you could turn it up another 10%. Then, all of a sudden, you have to turn them down to 20% just so your ear drums aren't bursting in your headphones. A lot of people think volume is everything, but this is not so, especially with this card. Once I got the volume down to a tolerable level, I then noticed the depth of the sound that was now being pumped out by this card. Bass was much more bassy, and the highs were much more toned. Listening to some of the music I listen to and drawing comparisons from memory, I started to notice certain things that I never noticed before: some particular highs I probably had never heard before and the bass was so much more solid all the way around. Not to mention that the crackling and other assorted anomalies that seemed to be creeping into the on-board sound were no longer present.

The only negative things that I can come up with is the fact that it doesn't work immediately with Windows 8.1 (which is what I have). This new feature in Win 8.1 that involves quick shut down prevents the system from recognizing that the card is in the PCIe slot, unless you turn off the quick shut down feature. The reason I'm still giving this card 5 stars is because it only took one simple google search to find out the reason and change that - the speed of shut down / start up has not changed one iota since doing that and now the card is recognized every time the computer turns on. Besides that, the packaging was slightly difficult to open up (it had twisty ties at 4 different places that were holding the card into the foam), but it was a simple thing to grab a pair of scissors to snip them. The other negative thing (and this isn't truly a negative) is that I don't use the attached microphone since the turtle beach headphones I have include a built-in microphone which is easier to use.

On to pros and cons:

PROS:
- Giant increase in overall volume
- Bass is much rounder, much more depth
- Highs are beautiful and not toneless
- Everything in between is great as well
- For the price ($100 or so) the difference in quality is overwhelming
- Simple to insert into the PCIe slot
- Comes with its own software you can install on your system that lets you tweak the settings and modify the different levels. I use the "flat" default setting, and it's fantastic. I may tweak it a bit in the future, but for now, I enjoy the default setting.

CONS:
- Doesn't immediately work with Windows 8.1 until you change the quick shut down function
- A tiny bit difficult to get out of the packaging

I don't have a 5.1 setup at home to test how well it works with a surround speaker setup, but with a pair of decent headphones and stepping up from on-board sound, this is definitely a worthwhile purchase if sound quality is important to you. Just remember to turn your volume down low and move up from the bottom once you get it into your system!
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Mike
5.0 out of 5 stars Hear what you have been missing
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 19, 2022
Style: With 11 Mic EQ Presets via SoftwareVerified Purchase
Brought my Razer headphones to life! Great sound and great volume. The best feature is there are 2 outputs so you do not have to unplug speaker to plug in headphones. Drives my 2.1 Logitech speakers with power to spare.
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Terrorgod
3.0 out of 5 stars Still tweaking it, but first impressions are mediocre.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 17, 2021
Style: With Beam Forming MicrophoneVerified Purchase
TLDR: Its a good card with decent features but tries to entice you with gimmicks rather than its strengths.

As someone who still uses soundcards in 2021, I feel like the use case needs to be defined as we are a relatively niche crowd. I use mine as I needed extra audio jacks that my motherboard just doesn't have the required ports, ended up liking the headphone amp, and extra control the software provides when switching between the 2 devices. I decided to buy a Sound Blaster Z after my Recon3D Fatal1ty started creating static with my new gpu when it went to max power and no amount of troubleshooting between switching ports, different cables, reinstalling drivers was fixing it. I loved the simple and seemless control that software had brought me and the audio quality was good enough for me that I had 0 complaints until it started humming. The Sound Blaster Z seemed like an absolute upgrade using the same chip, just more or enhanced features, and after doing some research the Z and Z SE seemed to be identical with only software changes, so I opted for the Z as it was slightly cheaper open box and came with a microphone which I wanted to try out as mine is cheap (saddly in the very little testing I have done it hasn't been comparing well).
Installation was simple, just uninstalled the old cards drivers, plopped it in a PCIe slot and it went to the races, the software makes you restart a few times to install it, and once its all in you are given the Sound Blaster Command center. As with every new piece of software, it saddly wants you to sign into an account, and instead of just having decent standard settings it has a ton of profiles which I am not a huge fan of. I should have made marks at what the Recon3D was doing at default, because everything sounds different which was a little jarring as I was hoping for just a more refined sound to what I was used to noting its the same processor etc, but the profiles are really overkill. Smart Volume had me going nuts in voice chats as it would practically silence the game for me to listen to someone talk and this was on by default (I think the old card has this feature but it was off unless I wanted it). To get some semblence of normality, turning Surround and Crystalizer up to 50 (and bass for headphones) sounds ok, leave smart volume and Dialog+ off, I can't think of a good use case for those features unless you really wanted to pick out voices in a poorly created game/movie. I haven't touched the equalizer yet either and just leave it on Flat as I am unsure what my old preferences were but once I did the first changes it sounded a good bit better.
Overall I can say the card does work, the Z seems to have all the updates the SE got and it even pops up as a SE in the devices section of the software (while it still says Z in the top left). I wouldn't worry about getting a Z over a SE as the mic doesn't seem to be very good unless you are in a very silent room or have a lot of time to tweak something that probably doesn't produce good results anyway (it auto focused on my computer fans the second I stopped talking creating very bad noises). The static I heard through the other card during GPU load is also gone when switching to this card, so I'll keep it however I can't give it a good rating as I am a bit unhappy about having to make an account for something that should be just simple audio control software. I also experience some bugs when utilizing the instant switch between speakers and headphones as I have to reselect the audio device in discord even though it doesn't change otherwise I won't hear the other call participants. It's a good card with great IO (even has optical out/in which I forgot to mention is a great way to feed game consoles through your PC audio) but plagued with all the partnership profiles or gimmicky features that I'm left underwhelmed.
Customer image
3.0 out of 5 stars Still tweaking it, but first impressions are mediocre.
By Terrorgod on October 17, 2021
TLDR: Its a good card with decent features but tries to entice you with gimmicks rather than its strengths.

As someone who still uses soundcards in 2021, I feel like the use case needs to be defined as we are a relatively niche crowd. I use mine as I needed extra audio jacks that my motherboard just doesn't have the required ports, ended up liking the headphone amp, and extra control the software provides when switching between the 2 devices. I decided to buy a Sound Blaster Z after my Recon3D Fatal1ty started creating static with my new gpu when it went to max power and no amount of troubleshooting between switching ports, different cables, reinstalling drivers was fixing it. I loved the simple and seemless control that software had brought me and the audio quality was good enough for me that I had 0 complaints until it started humming. The Sound Blaster Z seemed like an absolute upgrade using the same chip, just more or enhanced features, and after doing some research the Z and Z SE seemed to be identical with only software changes, so I opted for the Z as it was slightly cheaper open box and came with a microphone which I wanted to try out as mine is cheap (saddly in the very little testing I have done it hasn't been comparing well).
Installation was simple, just uninstalled the old cards drivers, plopped it in a PCIe slot and it went to the races, the software makes you restart a few times to install it, and once its all in you are given the Sound Blaster Command center. As with every new piece of software, it saddly wants you to sign into an account, and instead of just having decent standard settings it has a ton of profiles which I am not a huge fan of. I should have made marks at what the Recon3D was doing at default, because everything sounds different which was a little jarring as I was hoping for just a more refined sound to what I was used to noting its the same processor etc, but the profiles are really overkill. Smart Volume had me going nuts in voice chats as it would practically silence the game for me to listen to someone talk and this was on by default (I think the old card has this feature but it was off unless I wanted it). To get some semblence of normality, turning Surround and Crystalizer up to 50 (and bass for headphones) sounds ok, leave smart volume and Dialog+ off, I can't think of a good use case for those features unless you really wanted to pick out voices in a poorly created game/movie. I haven't touched the equalizer yet either and just leave it on Flat as I am unsure what my old preferences were but once I did the first changes it sounded a good bit better.
Overall I can say the card does work, the Z seems to have all the updates the SE got and it even pops up as a SE in the devices section of the software (while it still says Z in the top left). I wouldn't worry about getting a Z over a SE as the mic doesn't seem to be very good unless you are in a very silent room or have a lot of time to tweak something that probably doesn't produce good results anyway (it auto focused on my computer fans the second I stopped talking creating very bad noises). The static I heard through the other card during GPU load is also gone when switching to this card, so I'll keep it however I can't give it a good rating as I am a bit unhappy about having to make an account for something that should be just simple audio control software. I also experience some bugs when utilizing the instant switch between speakers and headphones as I have to reselect the audio device in discord even though it doesn't change otherwise I won't hear the other call participants. It's a good card with great IO (even has optical out/in which I forgot to mention is a great way to feed game consoles through your PC audio) but plagued with all the partnership profiles or gimmicky features that I'm left underwhelmed.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Sound Quality. Updated Windows 11 Drivers available via Sound Blaster Command.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 11, 2022
Style: With 11 Mic EQ Presets via SoftwareVerified Purchase
Works great and the sound quality is amazing. Make sure you are using this with decent speakers, otherwise stay with motherboard integrated audio.
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Brian Costa
3.0 out of 5 stars 3/5 based on it working properly
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 13, 2015
Style: With Beam Forming MicrophoneVerified Purchase
Let me start off by saying I am not an unfair reviewer who takes off stars for "the package came in late" or the product was "DOA". This review will pertain only to the product's quality. Let me also say that I returned this, and this is a rather 'generous' review in terms of the number of stars I am giving it.

I first unwrapped the package - excited and eager to install the card. This card should be should installed in a PCI-E x1 slot. However, on my current configuration, this slot was not an option. So I installed it on a PCI-E 3.0 slot. Sure, that sounds like a mistake on my part, but after some research, I found that it was okay to install the card on that slot as long as the lane was turned down to x1 speeds. My motherboard does this automatically. The card was installed, the drivers installed, and I was ready for some great sound.

When windows first booted after the initial drivers install, my AKG K712's blasted with sound (unexpectedly) with windows start up music. I mean, it was by default at 100% volume! Ouch! Other reviews had complained about this, but I only saw that issue AFTER the install...my poor headphones...my poor ears...

The Good:
Anyway, I fiddled with the options (SBX, EQ, etc). Music quality was excellent! Games sounded incredible with SBX Pro on (fantastic positional ques). Obviously, SBX Pro does 'taint' the sound a bit. You aren't getting 100% reproduction of all the original sounds due to the surround processing algorithms. But that's fine, you should expect this with any DSP. Also, the headphone amp was enough to power my headphones with no white noise (at least not at the volume I had it at).

The Bad:
When I have a new product and I expect it to do something, I test the *bleep* out of it. I wanted to make sure I got what I paid for. Unfortunately, I don't think I did...After playing for 30 minutes or so, I started noticing sounds on my right surround were lower than sound coming from my left surround. (R/L surround - referring to the surround speakers on the 5.1 channel setup) And yes, I am still referring to my headphones. At this point, SBX was enabled to properly downmix 5.1 to binaural stereo.
I tried with Dragon Age Inquisition, Warframe, Far Cry 4. Each time I tested this I came up with the same results. I put my character next to a fixed sound source and spun around. It kept happening! I thought I was going crazy...or deaf in one ear! So I swapped headphones, I even wore my headphones backwards. Nope, it wasn't my ears or the headphones. It was the card...

Aside from this, the drivers and software aren't great either. I tried multiple versions (factory version of drivers and latest drivers) and still had the same issue. You know the drivers are terrible when you find multiple forum posts about "how to uninstall sound blaster drivers". It is literally an art form! Ok, maybe not literally...

Also, switching from headphones to speakers in the software would crash apps that were currently playing sound. For instance, I would have to reload a youtube video I was currently watching in my browser if I switched mid-video. I've never had to deal with this inconvenience before.

So for the terrible drivers and software, I knock off 2 stars.

The Ugly:
I didn't knock off stars for the following complaints because I believe these issues were caused by the PCI slot I used (despite other sources saying it "should" be fine). Maybe using a PCIe x1 slot would have eliminated or at least mitigated these issues.

I was just playing a game, minding my own business, when suddenly WHAM! The sound card went into "screech mode". Yes, this is actually a problem with these cards. Because many people had this issue, it may not even be due to the PCI slot I installed it on. But I'll give Creative the benefit of the doubt. Screech mode is when all sound coming from the sound card is at 100% volume and is highly distorted. It sounded like I was listening to an Atari game console have a stroke. It was so sudden, I threw my headphones off and quickly unplugged them before any damage was done to my headphone speaker drivers.

As if that wasn't bad enough...It happened TWICE! Arg!

The icing on the cake was when I got a BSOD from this card. Yep, I powered down the comp and yanked the card out. That was crossing the line. My computer has all the latest tech, runs windows 7 with rock-solid stability. This card thinks its going to just walk into my computer and cause BSOD's? Not on my watch.

Conclusion:
Unfortunately, Creative has a bit of a hold on me due to their SBX technology. It is superior to Dolby Headphone and (of course) the Razer simulated surround sound (the worst of all of the DSP's). So I returned the card and went with a USB sound blaster unit. I will be using optical out to feed the signal to a schiit modi 2 and schiit magni 2 (DAC/Amp). I had this plan in mind with the Z, but I wanted to hold off a bit (a bit of a costly combo).

I'll be honest, if anyone else produced a card with DSP as good as the SBX Pro, I would gladly jump ship and figuratively watch the Creative boat sink. I would have a smile on my face, a fancy drink in my left hand and use my right hand to pump a clenched fist into the air in celebration for Creative's demise.

Someone needs to challenge Creative (besides Asus) by coming up with a competitive sound card that caters to gamers. And I don't mean casual gamers, I mean for the kind of gamers that want high end sound. Gamers that want the best competitive edge in FPS games. If creative was truly challenged, maybe they would wake up and push a better product.

Bottom Line:
If you have a free PCIe slot open, you can give the card a shot. You may still encounter the same problems I did. If you don't have a PCIe slot available, start looking else where. This thing will quickly become the bane of your existence if you don't heed my warning.
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Anthony
5.0 out of 5 stars Sound Blaster Z with Mic
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 9, 2016
Style: With Beam Forming MicrophoneVerified Purchase
Typical gamer story; On board "THX Pro Super Awesome Quality 7.1" sound card seemed to work well enough, but finding a gaming desktop mic was next to impossible. Eventually tried an old, crappy external card and realized it wasn't 100% the mics I tried; even with sound cancelling and low levels, the internal mic port just had too much static. External card, while partially broken, had a far superior mic port.

Figured I would give this card and mic a shot after reading positive reviews, at least for my needs. Before even adjusting sound settings for my preference, I immediately noticed a dramatic, ear-pleasing change in gaming audio.

Positional sounds are now precise and extremely on-point (without even using the "Scout" feature), surround channels are very distinct while still blending atmosphere and music well, and the overall quality was massively increased. My speakers have very good imaging, and this just blew my mind hearing how well these cheap PC speakers can sound. All audio, especially midbass, is much cleaner with hardly any boom.

Most importantly for my needs, the mic port has absolutely 0 feedback, even using my previous mic. I gave the one that comes with it a shot and mounted it on my monitor. I also decided to use a box to raise iTypical gamer story; On board "THX Pro Super Awesome Quality 7.1" sound card seemed to work well enough, but finding a gaming desktop mic was next to impossible. Eventually tried an old, crappy external card and realized it wasn't 100% the mics I tried; even with sound cancelling and low levels, the internal mic port just had too much static. External card, while partially broken, had a far superior mic port.

Figured I would give this card and mic a shot after reading positive reviews, at least for my needs. Before even adjusting sound settings for my preference, I immediately noticed a dramatic, ear-pleasing change in gaming audio.

Positional sounds are now precise and extremely on-point (without even using the "Scout" feature), surround channels are very distinct while still blending atmosphere and music well, and the overall quality was massively increased. My speakers have very good imaging, and this just blew my mind hearing how well these cheap PC speakers can sound. All audio, especially midbass, is much cleaner with hardly any boom.

Most importantly for my needs, the mic port has absolutely 0 feedback, even using my previous mic. I gave the one that comes with it a shot and mounted it on my monitor. I also decided to use a box to raise the monitor up so my center of view is the middle of the monitor (should have done this a while back). I did have to play with a few of the settings; in my environment I actually had to turn off some of the default options. Now everyone hears me clearly and at a perfect volume. They can still hear some background noise if someone is directly behind me, but the mic has a fairly narrow path by default. t up so my center of view is the middle of the monitor (should have done this a while back). I did have to play with a few of the settings; in my environment I actually had to turn off some of the default options. Now everyone hears me clearly and at a perfect volume. They can still hear some background noise if someone is directly behind me, but the mic has a fairly narrow path by default, keeping side noise out of my chats.

2 things I wish were different; we need a setting in the software to turn off those annoying LEDs (electric tape works BTW), and the line input us shared with the mic.. this probably doesn't affect many people at all, but I do like to route my tablet audio through my PC while I'm gaming. I wouldn't knock stars off for eother of these reasons, though, just because of how satisfied I am with this sound card and mic.
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