The mighty SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless headset just got a ridiculous Spring Sale price cut
The best headset I've tested has rarely dropped this low in price
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Amazon's Spring Sale has landed in the UK, and after perusing the best gaming deals, I was happy to see the SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless included amongst the rest of this week's savings. It's the best gaming headset I've ever tested, and continues to dominate our team's best headset guides no matter the platform, but it's also £329.99 most days.
That's a big investment for an accessory alone, even one that can hook up to the PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X/S all at once. But thanks to the spring sale, it's now £229.99 at Amazon, a mere £10 away from its lowest ever price yet. I shout and scream at my friends to pick up this headset every time it gets this low, and today's no different, as you're saving a huge £100 in total here. Not only that, you're getting a headset that, no matter the hundreds I've tested in its wake, has continued to smash the competition with its great sound, multi-platform compatibility, and hot-swappable battery tech. This is as good as it gets.
The SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless isn't immune to discounts, yet it's worth making a fuss about every time it drops closer to that £200 mark. For £100 off today, you're getting the best headset on the market, with simultaneous Bluetooth and 2.4GHz wireless, hot swappable batteries, a high-quality microphone, Tempest 3D Audio for PS5 / Microsoft Spatial Sound support, ANC, and support for three platforms at a time, including the PC, Xbox Series X/S, Switch/Switch 2, and PS5.
Featured in: best gaming headsets
US: $379.99 at Amazon
Should you buy the SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless headset in 2026?
Very few headsets have managed to make me forget about the SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless. In fact, since it launched back in 2022, I'd even not recommend everyday gamers grab the SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Elite in its stead - unless you have the cash to burn and are a bit of an audiophile.
The Arctis Nova Pro Wireless has remained one of the best PC headsets for gaming and other consoles due not just to its great sound, but all the features it offers in one comfortable and snazzy-looking package, and I'd still recommend it in 2026. Its 40 mm Neodymium Magnetic audio drivers still manage to make my favorite games sound sublime. I always have these cups on my head when grinding up the latest battle pass in Marvel Rivals on PS5, as they make everything sound intense, from the character select music to the roars of the character's Ultimates when a match is getting particularly heated.
My favorite feature of the pair is those hot-swappable batteries. I'm really bad at remembering to charge headsets, but this headset comes with a Base Station device that continuously charges one while you're using the other. Instead of sitting for hours and waiting for your headset to charge back up, you just have to swap the batteries, and away you go. That Base Station is also what lets you connect up to three platforms at a time, which is especially handy if you keep all your consoles in one confined setup.
If you have a bigger budget to spare, you could drop £559.49 at Amazon on the Arctis Nova Elite, which just saw its first-ever discount. That adds the ability to hook up to four sources at once, and you can mix the audio of each at the same time with its newly improved 'Game Station' (formerly the Base Station). It's also compatible with hi-res audio, which the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless can only achieve via a wired connection.
But honestly, I don't recommend everyone drop that amount of cash. Unless you also happen to be a big music nerd with access to a ton of FLAC audio tracks of your favorite albums. Parting with £229.99 now is enough to get the best parts of the Elite and the best headset out there on the market today, but you only have until the Spring Sale ends on March 16 to grab it.
Our guides to the best Nintendo Switch headsets, the best Xbox Series X headset, and the best gaming earbuds are full of cheaper alternatives if you can't quite budget for the Arctis Pro Wireless.
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Ever since I first held a NES controller in my hand I've been obsessed with gaming, and the hardware it runs on. I could hook up a NES and SNES to a telly, without instructions, before I could walk. Even now, nothing is more exciting then taking a console, or handheld, out the box for the first time and setting it up. This obsession transformed into a love of games and game music, which lead to my music degree and dream of becoming the Scottish Nobuo Uematsu. After sharing my love of games through music, I began to share my love through words on sites like TechRadar and iMore. This lead to becoming a Hardware staff writer for PCGamesN, and later the Senior Tech Writer for Dexerto, covering all things Steam Deck, PlayStation and Nintendo. With that experience, I was able to level up as Hardware Editor for GamesRadar+, where I'm still just as Nintendo, PlayStation and gaming tech obsessed as ever.
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