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Latest Streaming Microphone

2 products in this category · showing the newest arrivals

New
Razer

Razer Seiren V3 Pro

Dynamic USB/XLR Hybrid Streaming Microphone
Cardioid (unidirectional)
30 mm Dynamic Capsule
50 Hz – 16,000 Hz
48 / 96 kHz
Shure

Shure MV7+

Dynamic USB/XLR Hybrid Microphone
Cardioid (unidirectional)
50 Hz – 16,000 Hz
48 kHz
24-bit
Model Type Polar Pattern Capsule Frequency Response Sample Rate Bit Depth Max SPL Sensitivity Impedance Signal-to-Noise Ratio Adjustable Gain Connectivity Ports & I/O Operating System DSP Features Software Headphone Output Mute Function Material Mount Thread Power Requirement Dimensions Weight
Razer Seiren V3 Pro Razer Dynamic USB/XLR Hybrid Streaming Microphone Cardioid (unidirectional) 30 mm Dynamic Capsule 50 Hz – 16,000 Hz 48 / 96 kHz 24-bit / 32-bit (32-bit float via Synapse on Windows) 150 dB SPL (XLR), 125 dB SPL (USB) -50 dB (1 V/Pa at 1 kHz) 300 Ω 74 dB 40 dB USB-C, XLR (3-pin), 3.5mm Headphone Jack 1x USB-C, 1x XLR (3-pin), 1x 3.5mm Headphone Jack Windows 10 or later, macOS, PlayStation 5, iPadOS, Android AI Noise Remover, Limiter, Compressor, Expander, High-pass Filter, 32-bit Float Recording, Smart DSP Auto-Configuration Razer Synapse (Windows), Razer Streaming Dashboard 3.5mm stereo jack with zero-latency monitoring Touch Button with LED Indicator Zinc Unibody 5/8-27 threaded mount (standard boom arm compatible) Bus-powered via USB-C (5V / 500 mA) 165 x 115 x 230 mm (with yoke mount, H x W x D) ~650 g (1.43 lbs) with yoke mount
Shure MV7+ Shure Dynamic USB/XLR Hybrid Microphone Cardioid (unidirectional) 50 Hz – 16,000 Hz 48 kHz 24-bit 128 dB SPL (USB mode) XLR: -55 dBV/Pa (1.78 mV) at 1 kHz; USB-C: -33 dBFS/Pa at 1 kHz (min gain, flat mode) 350 ohms at 1 kHz (XLR output) USB-C, XLR (3-pin), 3.5mm Headphone Jack 1x USB-C, 1x XLR (3-pin), 1x 3.5mm Headphone Jack Windows, macOS, iPadOS, Android Auto Level Mode, Real-time Denoiser, Digital Popper Stopper, Tone Slider (Dark/Natural/Bright), High-pass Filter (75Hz/150Hz), Compressor, Limiter, Reverb (Plate/Hall/Studio), 3-band EQ ShurePlus MOTIV Desktop App (free download, Windows & macOS) 3.5mm stereo jack, zero-latency monitoring Integrated yoke mount with 5/8-inch thread adapter (3/8-inch adapter included) Bus-powered via USB-C (5V, no external power needed) 164 × 207 × 90 mm (with bracket, H × L × D) 573.5 g (1.26 lbs) with yoke mount

Audio accounts for 50% of the streaming and video experience — viewers will forgive blurry video but cannot tolerate bad audio. A streaming microphone is completely different from meeting microphones or headset mics — it is designed for clear vocals, low background noise, and professional sound quality.

The streaming microphone market is very diverse — from Blue Yeti (USB), Elgato Wave:3 (USB + mixer), Shure MV7 (USB + XLR) to Shure SM7B (professional XLR). This guide will help you choose a streaming microphone that suits your voice, environment, and budget.

Streaming Microphone Buying Criteria

Four important factors: microphone type (USB vs XLR, dynamic vs condenser), polar pattern, sound quality, and streaming features (mute button, mixer, monitoring).

Microphone type: USB microphones plug directly into your computer — easy to use, no additional equipment needed. XLR microphones offer higher quality but require an audio interface (Focusrite Scarlett, GoXLR) — more flexible and upgradeable. Dynamic microphones — Shure SM7B, Rode PodMic — capture close vocals, less background noise. Condenser microphones — Blue Yeti, Elgato Wave:3 — are more sensitive and detailed but pick up more ambient noise. For streamers in untreated rooms, dynamic microphones are the better choice.

Polar Pattern: Cardioid — captures sound from the front, rejects sound from behind and sides — best suited for streaming and podcasting. Some microphones have multiple polar patterns (Blue Yeti — cardioid, bidirectional, omnidirectional, stereo) — versatile for different purposes. For solo streaming, cardioid is enough.

Sound quality: Frequency response 20Hz-20kHz is standard. 24-bit/48kHz bit depth/sample rate is sufficient for streaming. Broadcast quality needs warm, natural sound without distortion when speaking loudly. Factors that affect sound: capsule size, preamp quality (in USB microphone or interface).

Streaming features: Physical mute button — very important for streaming. LED mute indicator — know when you are muted. Headphone jack — low-latency monitoring. Built-in mixer (Elgato Wave:3, Wave DX) — mix multiple audio sources, smart background noise reduction.

Key Specifications

SpecificationDescriptionRecommended Level
TypeCondenser or DynamicDynamic (noisy room), Condenser (quiet room)
ConnectivityUSB (plug-and-play) or XLR (needs interface)USB (beginner), XLR (professional)
Polar PatternPickup pattern: Cardioid, Omnidirectional, Figure-8Cardioid (for streaming)
Sample RateSampling frequency: 44.1kHz, 48kHz, 96kHz48kHz (streaming), 96kHz (production)
Bit DepthBit depth: 16-bit (CD), 24-bit (studio)24-bit
Frequency ResponseFrequency range the microphone can capture50Hz-15kHz (voice), 20Hz-20kHz (full range)
SensitivitydB level the microphone responds to. Higher = more sensitive-35 to -45 dBV/Pa
Mute ButtonPhysical mute button on the microphoneRecommended (important for streaming)
Headphone Jack3.5mm low-latency monitoring jackRecommended

Types of Streaming Microphones

USB Condenser Microphone — Blue Yeti, Blue Snowball, Samson Q2U

The most popular for beginners. Plug in USB and use immediately, sound quality is much better than headset mics. The Blue Yeti (1.5-2.5 million VND) is a legend — but it picks up fan noise, keyboard clicks, street noise. Suitable for quiet, treated rooms. The Samson Q2U has both USB and XLR — flexible for future upgrades.

USB Dynamic Microphone — Elgato Wave:3, Rode NT-USB+, Audio-Technica ATR2100x

Combines USB convenience with dynamic characteristics. The Elgato Wave:3 is the most popular microphone among streamers in 2023-2024 — beautiful design, warm sound, capacitive mute button, LED mute indicator, and most importantly: Wave Link mixer software that blends multiple audio sources and uses AI noise reduction. Suitable for beginner streamers wanting professional sound.

Professional XLR Microphone — Shure SM7B, Rode PodMic, Electro-Voice RE20

The pinnacle of streaming microphones. The Shure SM7B (over 10 million VND) is a legend — used by Joe Rogan and many top streamers. Requires an audio interface (Focusrite Scarlett 2i2, GoXLR, Elgato Wave XLR). Warm, smooth sound, excellent background noise rejection. The Rode PodMic (2-3 million VND + interface) delivers near-SM7B quality at a much lower price — a smart choice for professional streamers.

Boom Arm Mount

A boom arm mounts the microphone — brings the mic close to your mouth (5-15cm), noticeably improving sound quality. Choose a sturdy boom arm — Blue Compass, Elgato Wave Arm LP, Rode PSA1+. Avoid using the desk stand — it picks up vibrations and is inconvenient.

Budget Tiers

SegmentPriceFeaturesExamples
Budget300K - 1 million VNDUSB condenser, sound slightly better than headset, no mute button, plastic buildMaono DM30, Fifine K669B, Samson Q2U
Mid-range1 - 3 million VNDUSB dynamic/condenser, mute button, headphone jack, good qualityElgato Wave:3, Blue Yeti, Rode NT-USB+
Premium3 - 7 million VNDXLR dynamic + interface, professional broadcast qualityRode PodMic + Focusrite Scarlett 2i2, Shure MV7
Professional7 - 15 million+ VNDHigh-end XLR, Shure SM7B + GoXLR/Cloudlifter, broadcast qualityShure SM7B + Elgato Wave XLR + Boom Arm

Top Brands

BrandKnown ForSegment
ElgatoWave:3, Wave DX, Wave XLR — comprehensive streaming ecosystem, Wave Link softwareMid-range - Premium
ShureSM7B — broadcast legend, MV7 — excellent USB+XLR hybridPremium - Professional
RodePodMic, NT-USB+, RodeCaster Pro II — Australian quality, versatile and reliableMid-range - Professional
Blue MicrophonesYeti, Snowball — first USB microphones for streaming, most popular worldwideBudget - Mid-range
Audio-TechnicaATR2100x (USB+XLR), AT2020 (high-quality entry-level XLR)Budget - Mid-range

Comparison With Other Options

Streaming Microphone vs Headset Mic

Headset mics (HyperX Cloud, Logitech G Pro X) are convenient — built-in mic, no boom arm needed. But sound quality is limited — thin, not warm, picks up breathing and mouse clicks. A dedicated streaming microphone delivers much clearer, more professional sound. If you stream professionally, a dedicated mic is essential. Headsets are only sufficient for game chat with friends.

Condenser vs Dynamic Microphone for Streaming

Condenser: sensitive, detailed, bright sound — but picks up all background noise (fans, keyboards, traffic). Needs a sound-treated/quiet room. Dynamic: captures mainly vocals close to the mic, naturally rejects background noise. Suitable for noisy, untreated rooms. If you don't have a quiet private room, a dynamic microphone is the safer choice.

USB vs XLR Microphone

USB — plug-and-play, no extra equipment needed, easy to use, cheaper. XLR — higher quality, more flexible (swap mics, swap preamps), needs interface ($100-500). If you are just starting, USB (Elgato Wave:3 or Shure MV7) is enough. If you want to gradually upgrade, start with an interface + Rode PodMic or Shure MV7X.

Common Mistakes When Buying

Conclusion

Your microphone is the most important investment for your stream — allocate a worthy budget. For most new streamers, the Elgato Wave:3 (2.5-3.5 million VND) is the number one choice — USB dynamic, warm sound, Wave Link mixer software, convenient mute button, and a synchronized Elgato ecosystem.

If your budget is lower, the Samson Q2U (600-800K VND) or Fifine K669B (300-500K VND) are still much better than a headset. If your budget is higher, the Rode PodMic + Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 (4-5 million VND) delivers true broadcast quality. And remember: mic 5-15cm from your mouth, use a boom arm, and treat your room — that's 50% of audio quality.