There’s subtlety here too, with the HTC 10 offering up real clarity and insight through the midrange, so Bjork’s personality-packed Lionsong vocal sounds as quirky as it should be. There’s plenty of space for large-scale tracks like Hans Zimmer’s Gotham’s Reckoningand enough rhythmic know-how to keep ELO’s Mr Blue Skyfull of bounce and precision. It’s a precise, clean presentation, but still packs plenty of drive and enthusiasm. Apart from being easily the best sounding HTC phone we’ve heard, it could come close to being the best sounding phone this year. MORE: High-resolution audio: everything you need to knowĪs for how it sounds, HTC has really nailed it this year. This worked well for hip-hop and rock tracks, but classical and acoustic tracks suffer from the slight loss of subtlety – luckily it’s easily toggled on or off depending on your preferences. We found it only made subtle differences to most tracks, sometimes making them louder than with it switched off and perhaps adding a touch more bass response.īoomsound with Dolby processing returns as a setting too, and creates a bolder, more upfront sound than with it turned off. It then adjusts the sound frequencies to each ear to suit. It also features a new Personal Audio Profile System, which uses several tone tests to develop a unique audio profile tuned to your individual hearing capabilities. There’s also a headphone amp that HTC claims delivers twice the power of a conventional one. The HTC 10 supports 24-bit/192kHz hi-res music, and has upscaling tech on board for 16-bit files. Listening through headphones, the performance has been tweaked and improved here too thanks to better audio circuitry.
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