
The boom mic is a foam-covered capsule mounted on a flexible black metal arm, and looks almost identical to the BlackShark V2’s microphone. When powered on, a small indicator LED above the micro USB port glows unobtrusively. They include a 3.5mm headset cable jack, another 3.5mm jack for the detachable boom microphone, a micro USB port for charging, a microphone mute button, and a power button. Besides the volume dial, all other controls and connections also sit on the left earcup, arranged along the bottom edge. The only visual clue that this is a different headset, besides the lack of a hardwired cable, is that the Razer logo on the back of the earcups is a glossy black instead of neon green.

The headset even has the same prominent volume knob on the back side of the left earcup. This results in a light, comfortable fit that’s easy to wear for long periods of gaming. It has the same memory foam earpads wrapped in breathable fabric, and similarly memory-foam-covered padding on the underside of the headband with faux leather on the top side. It has the same oblong matte black plastic earcups connected to the headband through Y-shaped struts made of stiff wire, with cylindrical mounts that let each cup slide freely up and down to adjust the fit.
#RAZER BLACK SHARK MIC NOT WORKING MAC WITH WINDOWS PRO#
The Blackshark V2 Pro looks and feels almost exactly like the Editors' Choice award-winning Blackshark V2, just without the wire. However, at $179.99, it’s nearly twice as expensive as the BlackShark V2, and faces some stiff competition.

It looks, feels, and sounds just as good as, if not a little better than, the wired BlackShark V2, just without the cables. Razer now offers a wireless version in the BlackShark V2 Pro. The $100 wired gaming headset offered a comfortable fit, excellent sound quality, a fantastic mic, and accurate simulated surround sound.

We were greatly impressed by the Razer BlackShark V2.
