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Reviews

POCO F8 Ultra review: An Achievable aspirational all-rounder

Flagship within reach

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There’s a certain expectation that comes with a phone wearing the “Ultra” label. It should feel powerful the moment you pick it up, glide effortlessly through your day, and hold up across everything you throw at it — from people-packed events to late-night video-viewing sessions to accidental creative bursts you didn’t plan for.

The POCO F8 Ultra fits into that space: a device that wants to be the flagship for people who don’t normally buy flagships, while still delivering most of the things you look for in one.

I spent close to two weeks with the Denim Blue variant — the only version I tested — and that alone shaped a big chunk of my experience. The material feels unlike anything else in this bracket, enough that the included silicone case never even crossed my mind.

And that pretty much sets the tone for this review: the POCO F8 Ultra consistently punches above its class, not always perfectly, but convincingly enough that you’ll wonder why other brands can’t make this balance work.

What follows is my time with the phone across a handful of real events: the PIXEL by EPlayment ambassador announcement featuring cosplayer Charess, a Sony Media Thanksgiving Party where KAIA took part in some games, and finally, a quick tour of the Garuda Wisnu Kencana Cultural Park in Bali — my last chapter with the device. 

The rest was pure day-to-day: doomscrolling, chat threads, emails, random YouTube spirals, obsessing over Zoe Dang dances, a few shows (Would You Marry Me, plus fancams of LE SSERAFIM’s Kazuha during “Spaghetti” promotions), and a lot of Spotify time.

Performance: Fast, fluid, and mostly problem-free

POCO F8 Ultra

Day-to-day use on the POCO F8 Ultra feels exactly as you’d expect from a POCO F-series — and maybe even a touch more refined. 

Everything from opening apps to jumping across socials to switching between the camera and messages felt speedy. Nothing sluggish, nothing hesitant. Even coming from flagship foldables with comparable high-end chipsets, the POCO F8 Ultra holds its ground surprisingly well.

The dual-chip setup — Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 paired with the VisionBoost D8 — didn’t make itself known in dramatic ways. It just worked. That’s usually the best-case scenario: when speed feels normal, not overwhelming.

There was, however, one odd slowdown that forced me to restart the phone. I don’t recall it overheating or being under load. I even remember being inside an air-conditioned room. But it happened just once in nearly two weeks, and the phone went right back to normal afterwards.

Heat management also tells two different stories. Indoors, on most days, the phone stayed comfortably cool. But during the GWK tour in Bali — a very humid afternoon — the F8 Ultra warmed up quickly after just a handful of photos. Earlier too, while recording one-to-five-minute fancam videos of KAIA during a party game segment, the heat was noticeable but not alarming.

Nothing throttled, nothing crashed. Just warmth you can feel — something common in hot weather and during extended video recording.

Gaming: Zenless Zone Zero at high settings, no drama

POCO F8 Ultra

I kept gaming simple: Zenless Zone Zero was the only title I tested. I didn’t tweak the settings; everything was mostly set to high.

And honestly? The F8 Ultra handled it like a champ.

Fast-paced scenes with lots of particle effects felt smooth, clean, and stable. No visible stutters, no dips that broke immersion. Performance simply stayed out of the way and let me play.

It never throttled during gameplay. The only hitch was that earlier slowdown outside of gaming.

The Bose-tuned speakers also played a big role here. They’re really good — richer and more rounded than the recent flagship-level phone I tested, though not significantly better than the personal phones I use like the Galaxy Z Fold7, Magic V5, or iPhone 14 Pro Max. Equal, but considering the price, that’s already a win.

Display: Big, immersive, and surprisingly comfortable

POCO F8 Ultra

Jung Somin in Would You Marry Me on Disney+

You’d expect a 6.9-inch display to feel unwieldy, but in hand, the POCO F8 Ultra feels smaller than it looks. The body is mostly flat with rounded edges and a slightly raised camera module — nothing distracting.

Media consumption on the HyperRGB panel was pure fun. I watched a few episodes of “Would You Marry Me” on Disney+, along with some fancams of LE SSERAFIM’s Kazuha. No issues. Just a large, immersive screen that knows how to make content look good.

POCO F8 Ultra

LE SSERAFIM Kazuha Spaghetti Fancam

Under direct sunlight — especially during the GWK tour — legibility was excellent. I didn’t think about brightness once. It just worked.

At night, eye comfort wasn’t a problem either. I tend to catch up on videos in low-lit conditions; the display never felt harsh, never strained my eyes.

POCO F8 Ultra | Zoe Dang

As for color accuracy, it doesn’t feel perfectly neutral — there’s a hint of saturation. Not enough to skew reality, but enough to make things look more vibrant than flat.

Battery Life: Quietly impressive

I didn’t keep track of exact screen-on time, but I kept an eye on percentages. What stood out was how the phone rarely dipped below 50%, even on days when I used the camera heavily. On lighter days — doomscrolling, chats, shows — I typically ended around 58% to 62%.

Charging performance is reliable:

  • 100W wired charging:
    10–15% to full in around 1 hour and 5 minutes
  • Daily top-ups (my usual routine):
    From ~50% to full in 20–25 minutes

Wireless charging works. I only used it briefly to confirm it existed — I didn’t have the spec sheet then — but it’s there if you need it.

No major shifts in routine, but the 6500mAh battery gave me enough confidence to leave the powerbank at home more often.

Camera: Reliable in Good Light, Creative at 10x, and Mostly Consistent

My shooting leaned heavily on people. During the PIXEL by Eplayment event, I captured a lot of photos of Charess. During the Sony Media Thanksgiving Party, I shot several photos and videos of KAIA. And in Bali, I covered the cultural sights at GWK, a few scenic shots and some food.

Main camera (50MP Light Fusion 950)

In good lighting, the results are vibrant, lively, and clean — exactly what you expect at this level. At night, results are mixed but lean toward usable to good, depending on the situation.

Periscope (5x and 10x)

This was more fun than expected. I shot a lot at 5x and 10x during the Charess event and during KAIA taking part in party games.

Here’s a quick reel of KAIA at the Thanksgiving party.

@rodneil KAIA playing games at the Sony Thanksgiving Party. Finally saw them live after missing out on several tech events this year. 😁 @Angela @Charice 🍒 @charlotte! 🌺 @Sophia ♡ @A-leXa #KAIA ♬ original sound – Rodneil

Portraits were also fun.

At 10x, the F8 Ultra can produce fantastic images — one of my favorite focal lengths of the entire review. There were a few moments of sharpness inconsistency when I shot KAIA, but outside of that, 10x delivered some of my most memorable shots.

Favorites

A few stood out:

A couple walking out of a shaded area into a patch of light with the massive Vishnu structure looming behind them.

A fun shot where I posed with Naruto hand-signs with the same Vishnu structure in the background.

A framed shot of the Vishnu and Garuda fountain at the GWK entrance, taken through tree branches.

A distant flower shot that created a naturally shallow depth of field.

A handful of KAIA photos that turned out much better than expected.

Front camera

I’m not a big selfie taker, so the samples are limited. They looked… nice? Nothing to complain about.

Quirks

For some reason, launching the camera in Bali occasionally slid into Document mode instead of a zoom level. Probably just a swiping mishap, but worth noting.

Here are a few more sample photos:

Audio: Warm, rich, and better than expected

POCO F8 Ultra

So Easy (To Fall In Love) by Olivia Dean

I didn’t touch any audio settings during my listening sessions. Out of the box, the Bose-tuned speakers delivered warm, rich tones with no distortion even at full volume.

POCO F8 Ultra

Messy by Estelle Fly

My soundtrack during the review included:

  • Olivia Dean
  • “Messy” by Estelle Fly
  • “Shampoo” by Greg Shilling, Jesse Barrera, and Albert Posis
POCO F8 Ultra

Shampoo by Greg Shilling, Jesse Barrera, and Albert Posis

Across all of them, the F8 Ultra sounded fuller than phones in its bracket, and at par with flagships I normally use. That doesn’t make it a miracle speaker system — but it does make it one of the most impressive audio experiences in its price range.

Design & Handling: Denim Blue steals the show

POCO F8 Ultra

The Denim Blue variant feels genuinely premium. The texture stands out in a sea of smooth glass slabs, and it feels great in hand — light, easy to grip, and consistently nice to hold. This alone puts it comfortably in my Top 5 best in-hand phones of 2025.

IP68? I splashed the device a bit. Water clung to the Denim material instead of rolling off the way it does on slippery glass, but it wiped clean and left no issues.

Software: Smooth and snappy with a familiar caveat

HyperOS 3 felt buttery throughout my testing. Snappy animations, fluid transitions — nothing to complain about.

HyperIsland also worked reliably. It updated consistently with whatever I played on Spotify, which is more than I can say for certain flagship phones that stop showing the right track after a while.

The only drawback: the ads. Still not a fan of them. Still too many.

eSIM setup was painless and worked instantly.

Is the POCO F8 Ultra your GadgetMatch?

The POCO F8 Ultra sits in a tight spot. It wants to be the phone for users who want flagship performance without paying flagship prices — and it largely achieves that. It offers:

  • Strong performance
  • Rich audio
  • A large, immersive display
  • Dependable battery life
  • A versatile camera setup
  • A design that doesn’t feel cheap in any way

And it does all this with the top-end variant priced at US$ 799 / GBP 799 / PhP 42,999, with early-bird discounts bringing it even lower.

It’s not perfect — the occasional warm-ups, a few sharpness inconsistencies, and the ad-heavy software are real drawbacks — but the overall experience feels far more refined than what POCO used to offer.

The F8 Ultra is what I’d call an achievable aspirational flagship: the kind you can actually buy without feeling like you’re stretching too far, while still enjoying the feeling of owning something premium.

For a lot of people, that’s exactly the sweet spot. That’s why this is a Swipe Up and deserves the GadgetMatch Seal of Approval.

Drones

Antigravity A1 review: A new way to fly

Effortless cinematic flight made simple

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Antigravity A1

When a drone removes the pressure of framing your shot, something shifts. Instead of thinking like a cameraman in mid-air, you start feeling like a passenger—gliding, peeking, drifting wherever curiosity points. That’s the Antigravity A1’s biggest trick. It frees you from the usual anxiety of lining up subjects and horizons, and instead hands you a 360° canvas where everything is the shot.

You’re not just flying a drone here. You’re capturing possibilities.

A learning curve that feels worth it

Antigravity A1

Our first encounter with the A1 wasn’t graceful. The whole kit—the drone, the motion controller, the goggles—looked like more gear than we’d ever want to carry. And honestly, it’s not light. The carrying case helps, but if you’re a creator who travels with limited space, you’ll feel the bulk.

But something changes after you watch Antigravity’s tutorial videos. The setup starts making sense. The workflow becomes clearer. And suddenly this intimidating kit clicks into a system that feels thoughtfully built.

Yes, the A1 demands more commitment than a typical foldable drone. But once everything is running, it also rewards you in ways those drones simply can’t.

Because the moment you let go of traditional framing, the experience opens up.

Flying feels different — and surprisingly freeing

Antigravity A1

The first few minutes gave us honest-to-goodness vertigo. The goggles trick your brain for a moment, and we had to remind ourselves that we weren’t the ones flying… only the drone was. But after that initial adjustment, the A1 became one of the easiest drones we’ve flown.

This is coming from a team used to a standard RC controller.

The motion controller does have a tiny millisecond delay, but nothing deal-breaking. Once you start moving with it, the A1 responds fast enough to match your intent. The result: a strange but enjoyable combination of freedom and precision.

Antigravity A1

Range is a bit trickier. The spec sheet promises up to 5km, but real-world conditions paint a very different picture. In our subdivision, we managed only about 500–800 meters before warnings popped up.

Antigravity A1

In a more open field, we pushed farther—around 1.5km—before the connection dropped again. We’re guessing interference, but it’s a reminder that real-world flight always has variables.

Still, when it’s in the air, the A1 feels smooth, confident, and ready for creativity.

A camera that encourages imagination

This is where the A1 shines the most.

The 8K 360° camera is excellent in well-lit environments. Stitching between lenses is clean, and the lack of blind spots means you can essentially treat the entire sky as a playground. Missed your subject? Reframe later. Didn’t tilt fast enough? Fix it in post.

Antigravity A1

The camera encourages experimentation because it removes punishment. It lets you fly for fun—and edit with intention later.

Obstacle avoidance also works well, at least in proper lighting. The goggles flash colors and beep based on distance: yellow at around 2.5–5 meters, red when you’re close—around 1–1.5 meters. Just remember: this system does not work in the dark. If visibility is low, the sensors won’t save you.

Antigravity A1

Return-to-Home, on the other hand, is rock solid. We unplugged the goggles by accident and the drone immediately started flying back. Same thing happened when the signal dropped. It’s reassuring, especially for a drone that encourages bold flights.

The workflow is both smooth… and frustrating

Antigravity’s card reader is great. Plug it into your phone and the app picks it up right away. It reads, writes, and lets you edit without transferring files into internal storage. It’s efficient, and it saves so much time and space.

Antigravity A1

Wireless transfer, however, needs work. Our phone refused to connect to the drone directly. No wireless transfers, no visibility, just repeated errors. For a product aimed at fast social-ready workflows, this is a weak spot.

Antigravity Studio—the brand’s own editing app—feels familiar if you’ve used CapCut or similar tools. Layout is intuitive, and even if it has its own style, newcomers won’t get lost. You can start editing almost immediately.

Is the Antigravity A1 your GadgetMatch?

Antigravity A1

The Antigravity A1 isn’t trying to compete with traditional drones. It’s trying to change the way we capture the world from above. And in many ways, it succeeds.

It’s not the smallest setup. It’s not the easiest to pack. And its wireless transfer issues are frustrating.

But once you’re in the air, flying through its goggles, seeing a spherical 8K world you can reframe later—it becomes an entirely different creative experience. The kind that makes the weight worth carrying. The kind that makes you want to go out and try something new.

If you’re a creator who’s tired of shooting the same angles and the same predictable drone footage, the Antigravity A1 opens up a new lane.

One that feels a little wild, a little experimental, and a lot of fun.

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Gaming

Razer Raiju V3 Pro review

Competitive controller that knows exactly who it’s built for

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Raiju V3 Pro

When I first unboxed the Razer Raiju V3 Pro, my brain immediately went: okay, this is exciting. It had that wow factor — that feeling of holding a piece of tech that’s meant to do something special. It’s the kind of controller that makes you want to jump straight into a game just to see what all the fuss is about.

Build and feel — familiar, but also very not

Razer Raiju V3 Pro

Coming from the DualSense, the first surprise is the weight. The Raiju V3 Pro is definitely lighter, but not in a cheap way. Holding it felt different, wider even, and my hands were a little more relaxed because of that added space.

Razer Raiju V3 Pro

The grip texture is great — no fear of slipping, and it feels particularly good on the bottom of your palm.

The face buttons? Smaller surface area, longer travel. Premium-feeling overall, though I’ll be honest: I’m not entirely convinced the Raiju V3 Pro’s feel matches its price tag. That’s mostly because I’ve tried some GameSir controllers that felt surprisingly similar for a fraction of the price. But still — this feels like a product built with intent.

Gameplay experience — where it actually comes alive

 

Most of my testing happened on NBA 2K26 because… well… that’s the game I always end up playing. And this was the moment the TMR thumbsticks flexed. I found myself doing more dribble combos and experimenting with shot styles using the right stick simply because I had zero fear of drift.

I also jumped into a few fighting games — TEKKEN 8 and My Hero One’s Justice 2 — then humbled myself in several Death Match sessions on Call of Duty Black Ops 7. I even swung through Spider-Man Remastered for a bit. Across all of these, the controller felt responsive, fast, and ready for whatever chaos I threw at it.

HyperTriggers and extra inputs — surprisingly useful

Razer Raiju V3 Pro

The triggers were most noticeable during my Call of Duty matches. I still sucked at it — let’s be real — but I can totally see how better players would squeeze more value out of the locked fast-trigger mode. The surprise twist was how useful the triggers were for fighting games. Having minimal travel made reaction-based inputs feel snappier and more controlled.

As for the back paddles and claw bumpers: I thought about taking some of them out, but ended up keeping everything on. Eventually, they became little fidget points that didn’t interfere with gameplay.

Mapped the extra trigger to Square to make it easier to hit the Triangle + Square combo for self alley-oops.

In practice, I rarely used them because I’m such a muscle-memory player… except in NBA 2K26. I mapped self alley-oops and flashy passing to the extra triggers, which helped because 2K moved those combos around this year.

Thumbsticks — the star of the show

Razer Raiju V3 Pro

The TMR sticks? Excellent. Smooth, accurate, fluid — all of it. I had fun abusing them without worrying about drift, and NBA 2K26 really let me push them to their limit. COD: Black Ops 7 was harder, but I think that’s more on me than the controller. Maybe a sensitivity tweak or two will fix that over time.

Customization — only what I needed

I’m not the type who loves deep tweaking, so I mostly skipped Synapse. I only used the mobile Razer Controller app to remap the extra triggers. And honestly? That was enough. The controller already felt good out of the box.

Wireless performance — HyperSpeed does its job

No lag. No hiccups. No difference between wired and wireless — seriously. HyperSpeed Wireless worked wonders and felt as reliable as any cable-connected controller I’ve used.

Pain points — minor, but noticeable

Razer Raiju V3 Pro

There are a couple of things worth noting.

The big one: no haptic feedback. The DualSense’s signature feature simply doesn’t exist here. Razer says this controller was designed with real pro players, and removing rumble seems to be one of those “it’s not needed in esports” decisions.

Honestly? After a while — especially during fast-paced games — I didn’t miss it. Haptics matter more in story-driven titles, and this controller isn’t really meant for those anyway.

One more thing: I couldn’t turn on the PlayStation with the Raiju V3 Pro. I still needed a DualSense for that.

Who is this for?

This controller is for people who play fast-paced, competitive games. Plain and simple.

But it’s also for players who want a controller built to take a beating — the kind that survives long sessions, intense button-mashing, and weekend-long gaming marathons. Its battery life is impressive, too, making it a great backup for when your DualSense suddenly taps out mid-game.

If you want a premium esports controller designed specifically for PS5, this is one of the best — if not the best — option right now.

If you want rumble, adaptive triggers, or a cinematic gaming experience? This isn’t it.

Is the Razer Raiju V3 Pro your GamingMatch?

If I had to describe the whole experience in one line: I’m swiping right because the Razer Raiju V3 Pro is an excellent piece of tech.

But it’s not for everyone, especially not for its asking price (EUR 209.99 / PHP 12,990). You can argue there are cheaper options — absolutely — but most of those lean heavily toward PC.

In the PS5 space, especially for competitive players, this is probably the strongest contender you can buy today.

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Lifestyle

Shokz OpenFit 2+ review: A love letter to an ultramarathoner

What open-ear freedom feels like when you are chasing a comeback

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There is always a moment in every athlete’s life when the universe nudges you in a direction you swore you were not ready to face again.

Mine arrived softly, almost shyly, in the form of a date circled on my calendar: Spartan Trail 50K. The last piece of my so-called “Trailfecta.” It stared back at me like an old friend I loved deeply and feared at the same time.

I had conquered the 10K and the 21K earlier in the year. They felt like small victories; reminders of who I used to be. Yet beneath them lingered a shadow from a different mountain range. A memory from the Cordilleras that still pricked at my ribs.

The kind of memory where you fight for your life. You survive, but a part of you walks away shaken. And for a long while, I thought that version of me was gone.

Then one day, on an ordinary afternoon, a package arrived at my doorstep: the Shokz OpenFit 2+. They rested inside the box like a whisper from the universe saying, “You want a comeback. Take the first step.” And so I did.

Resting gently on your ears

I grew up in the world of open-ear audio. Not literally, of course, but you know what I mean.

After four years of living an endurance athlete’s life, open-ear earbuds became less of a gadget and more of a ritual. They were the pre-run talisman I reached for before lacing my shoes. The companion waiting for me beside my hydration pack.

It’s the one constant that never complained whenever I trained in places that didn’t always feel safe.

Most tech journalists don’t understand these ear-shaped talismans. They look at the Shokz OpenFit 2+ and frown like it is abstract art they didn’t sign up to interpret.

“It’s strange,” they say. “It’s odd.” And maybe it is. But it only seems odd when you do not spend your hours running through cities and trails, weaving through traffic, or lifting in gyms where someone is always dropping a dumbbell somewhere near your foot.

For me, the OpenFit 2+ felt natural. Familiar. Like another part of my training routine that never asked for attention yet always showed up for the work.

They sit on your ears the same way confidence sits on you after a successful training block: quietly, but securely.

There was no pinching or awkward reshuffling mid-run. No pressing against your skin when sweat turns your face into a waterfall.

With open-ear earbuds, awareness becomes part of the soundtrack. You hear your playlist, and you hear the city. You hear your breath, and you hear the wind. In my experience, I have become more connected to my run, not less. That is why athletes like me gravitate toward them.

They do not isolate you from the world. They teach you how to move through it mindfully.

Weightless enough to forget

Compared to the other open-ear companions I have worn —  JBL Soundgear Sense and Xiaomi OpenWear Stereo — the OpenFit 2+ felt almost unreal. So light it made me question physics.

They disappeared on my ears in the same magical way race-day nerves disappear once your feet start moving. One step, two steps, breathe, and suddenly your mind remembers what your body is built for.

The comfort surprised me. When training gets intense, everything on your body begins to irritate you. Your shirt scratches. Your watch strap sticks to your skin.

Even your hydration vest becomes a test of patience. Yet the OpenFit 2+ stayed soft, even during the sweatiest sessions. Their ultra-soft silicone 2.0 material feels like it was designed by someone who has actually suffered through humid outdoor runs.

The nickel-titanium hooks mold themselves to your ears like muscle memory. They adapt to you without asking you to adapt to them.

During my long solo runs — and these truly are solo because I can’t stand running with a group — the OpenFit 2+ stayed with me. They stayed in place through deadlifts at Anytime Fitness during peak hours in the evening.

They stayed with me through slow, frustrating MotoTaxi rides, where your only job is to survive the traffic and not lose your patience. And then one day, they didn’t.

The heartbreak of losing one half of a perfect pair

I had finished a long ride on a MotoTaxi. I removed my helmet and felt a strange lightness on my right ear. Not the peaceful kind. The “something-is-missing” kind.

My right OpenFit 2+ had fallen somewhere along the way. I retraced my steps like a detective in running shorts. I scanned the pavement, checked the corners, and prayed it had simply slipped somewhere. But… nothing.

And to make things worse, the battery had already died. The app could not reconnect. My tracking option was gone. The trail had gone cold.

The loss felt strange. Not dramatic, but emotionally inconvenient. Like when you lose a water bottle on a long run and pretend you don’t care until you realize you’ll think about it for days.

I tried other earbuds the next morning. It felt wrong and empty, so I got a new pair. Sometimes, we do not choose our attachments. They choose us.

Long runs and long hours

People imagine endurance athletes as superhumans, but the truth is we spend half our lives managing energy. Training teaches you that effort is currency. You cannot spend it carelessly.

Which is why I appreciated the OpenFit 2+ battery life more than I expected. My usage pattern is predictable. I run, work out, commute, and move between meetings. And still, it takes me a full week before the earbuds reach zero and ask for mercy.

Each pair lasts up to 11 hours of playtime. With the case, you get around two days, sometimes more. It reminded me of how endurance athletes stretch every calorie on race day.

Efficiency becomes instinct. You learn to conserve and push only when needed. The OpenFit 2+ works the same way. They’re generous with energy when you ask for it, and thoughtful when you don’t.

My only real gripe is a funny one. When the earbuds are inside the closed case, my iPhone sometimes decides it is still connected.

Imagine scrolling through TikTok and hearing nothing, only to realize your earbuds are quietly vibing inside the case. Not ideal, but manageable.

But every morning, they connect quickly. I leave the house, play “Maneater” by Nelly Furtado, and let myself strut down the hallway like it’s a runway disguised as daily life.

A soundtrack that made the miles feel lighter

The best thing about the OpenFit 2+ is not the volume, or the clarity, or the surprisingly balanced bass. It is the feeling it gives you.

At moderate volume, the audio wraps itself around your day like a soundtrack in a coming-of-age movie about an endurance athlete with questionable life choices and a stubborn heart.

My Spotify algorithm is as messy as my mind. Show tunes. Rock. Lofi beats. Taylor Swift. Ariana Grande. Olivia Rodrigo. Olivia Dean. Sabrina Carpenter.

It is a circus, and yet the OpenFit 2+ handles everything like a concert.

Running with them feels like training inside a music video. The world stays audible, but your flow becomes heightened. You can hear the cars, the dogs, the wind, your breath, and still lose yourself in the melody because it frames the run without overwhelming it.

Turning the volume too high can sound cranky, but this is not the device for noise cancellation addicts. This is for runners. Lifters. Commuters. People who need to stay present.

And when it comes to calls, the OpenFit 2+ performs better than many in-ears. I once attended a meeting while running — yes, running — and no one noticed the traffic, the footsteps, or my heavy breathing.

My colleagues said the audio was clean. Maybe they were not paying attention. Maybe the noise-cancelling mics are that good. Either way, I survived both the meeting and the run.

Tools that stay out of your way

The Shokz app is simple enough to complement your routine without distracting you.

You can adjust EQ, customize button controls, switch between Bass Boost or Vocal mode, or toggle Dolby Audio when you want your life to feel cinematic.

Multipoint pairing is smooth, especially when switching between a smartphone and a smartwatch. But the true beauty of the app is that it never feels like homework.

With the OpenFit 2+, life always comes first, music second. It becomes the soundtrack of grocery runs, slow walks, errands, and morning routines.

You start to feel like the protagonist of a charming 90’s romcom wandering through cobblestone streets even when you are just crossing the street to buy electrolytes.

Is the Shokz OpenFit 2+ your GadgetMatch?

The Shokz OpenFit 2+ is not for everyone.

Open-ear earbuds require a lifestyle that benefits from awareness and movement. If you stay indoors or prefer complete isolation, you will not enjoy them. You may even find them strange, like many do at first glance.

If you want awareness but in a different form, the Shokz OpenDots One might suit you. It clips onto your ear like jewelry and offers a similar open-ear experience. If that is the vibe you are leaning toward, it is time to Swipe Left.

The OpenFit 2+ is for people like me. The ones who train and the ones who move. The ones who sweat through sessions and still have a full day ahead of them.

It is for people who want comfort, durability, awareness, and audio that levels up their way of life. Sounds like you? Then it’s a Swipe Right.

At PhP 11,990, it feels like a steal when you consider how much higher other open-ear wearables cost for similar quality. For me, it is a Super Swipe. It earns the GadgetMatch Seal of Approval.

More importantly, it has earned a place in my life longer than any other open-ear earbuds I have owned. Long enough that when I lost one pair, I got another. That alone tells the full story. You know it: This is my GadgetMatch of the year.

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