this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2023
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Yes, exactly.
Actually "Gaming" was exactly the keyword that finally made me find these things. Looking for "normal" headsets/in-ears you can find some that also claim to be optimized for conferences and of course they also claim "low latency", but looking deeper the best they typically have are aptX-LL or something, which does shit when in duplex mode (unless yours and their bluetooth stack allow some hackery like Faststream). But the gaming-optimized ones typically offer real low latency.
Downside of in-ears is obviously the battery lifetime. I think I need to quick-charge them every 3h. But it's not often a problem, since most of the time I put them in their charging box during a short (5 minutes or so) break which is enough to boost them long enough that I don't even notice the battery through out a longer session. Upside - which I wanted them for is - that I don't have a large headset covering my ears and pressing on my head.
These could be nice upgrade for my Pixel Buds A series. I'm using them for Teams (low latency bad quality). (Not just music high latency high quality).
However, what I really also want to have are gaming headsets (with the long microphone and low latency) that are a bit more low profile and not huge.
At first I thought it was a matter of physics, but after seeing 2.4Ghz low latency in these tiny earbuds I guess it's possible.
Can't believe low profile on-ear headsets are not popular. They are all over the ear or huge.
And as you said the ones they generally make for teams sucks with BT high duplex latency.
Overear wireless gaming headsets should be easier to find. Logitech for example builds them for ages. I also had foldable business headphones from Logitech that have their own dongle and bluetooth support.