Came in mint condition, and it's tightness was a bit much but that's something that would probably go away from some long term use, but everything else about it makes it amount too one of the top 3 worst headsets I've ever worn.
The cushioning on the top band is very thin in density, offering about half a centimetre of padding before just pressing against the rigid hard band behind it, the padding doesn't even reach all the way along and there's a hard edge at both ends of it so the last inch of padding length is just hard plastic pretending to be padding. The tightness of the headset pushed in on my glasses and my jaw/cheek bones.
The earpieces have independent rotation from the headband connecting them, defeating the point of the hard structural design of the headset with a common failure point in headsets. They also came with a faint crackling noise coming from the material of the ear pieces.
On initial use of the headset, they were obscenely loud as if they were trying to be desktop speakers, After a doing the firmware update in attempt too reduce their volume and fix the wheel control issue, they got 4 times louder, now they have to be used at 10% system volume, if at 100% they can be heard from the next room over with the door closed easily.
When using the volume wheel on the headset, it changes the system volume instead of its own independent volume, making fine adjustments impossible with it as it goes 8-12% at a time on each adjustments (keyboard volume control is 2-3% at a time). When it comes too audio, music is relatively ok but games such as EFT are bad. Voicelines and gunfire feel disconnected form the world regardless of the headsets mode/settings.
Overall there's no reason to get these over a cheap Nubwo for 50$ or an Astro A10 or A20, it's no wonder they're forgotten compared to 10-15 years ago.