Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Razer’s new headphones serve in-game haptics straight to your skull

Razer Kraken V4 Pro headphones viewed from the side.
Razer

It might sound insane, but Razer really wants you to feel a level of immersion that no other brand can guarantee, even if that pursuit means creating a cushion that injects haptics into your back and butt. But the brand is not all about avant-garde, RGB-fueled wild products like the aforementioned Freyja haptics gaming cushion or the Zephry Pro mask.

Take, for example, the Kraken V4 Pro headphones that were announced at the RazerCon 2024 event this weekend. The design is your typical Razer affair with stealth black aesthetics and oodles of RGB work on the earcups so that they can scream “gamer” from a mile away.

Recommended Videos

But the most interesting trick up their sleeve is support for haptic feedback, which vibrates to the tune of in-game content. Razer calls it Sensa HD Haptics, and thanks to a collaboration with gaming studios, the company claims that users can feel “everything from the whiz of bullets to the subtle vibrations of distant thunderstorms.”

There are three preset haptic settings to pick from, but users can create their own custom profile as well. Of course, there’s also an option to adjust the intensity of the vibrations on the Kraken V4 Pro headphones.

Top view of the Razer Kraken V4 Pro headphones.
Razer

Now, these are not flat haptics. Instead, the vibration output is calibrated to the in-game action sequence intensity, the directional aspect, and the length of the audio playing in the background.

The whole system works just fine with music and films as well. Plus, the company is promising a response time of under 20 milliseconds, so you likely won’t run into any telltale non-synchronized audio and haptic streams.

At the heart of the whole system is what Razer calls “real-time audio-to-haptics conversion.” For games, the company says it worked with studios to deliver tailor-made haptic feedback suited for action sequences and cutscenes in titles such as Silent Hill 2, Final Fantasy XVI, and World of Warships, among others.

Some of the titles will offer as many as 100-plus unique haptic experiences for different in-game sequences. “Razer Sensa can control multiple actuators to distribute haptics with varying localized effects, allowing you to feel the directionality, distance, and location of events,” says the company.

Earcup view of the Razer Kraken V4 Pro headphones.
Razer

You can check the full list of Sensa -certified titles.

Notably, the Sensa haptics on the Kraken V4 Pro headphones are not limited to a small batch of titles. Instead, it can be enabled for “any game that has audio.” Razer’s website has listed custom settings for popular titles like the Assassin’s Creed series, God of War lineup, Elden Ring, Genshin Impact, and League of Legends, to name a few.

The rest of the Kraken V4 Pro is no drab affair, either. You get Razer-first quad connectivity modes (Razer HyperSpeed Wireless, Bluetooth, USB Wired, 3.5 mm), 40mm drivers, a retractable wideband microphone, and THX spatial audio support.

But keep in mind that if you enable all those flashy earcup RGB lights and the haptic experience, the battery life will come down from 50 hours to 12 hours per charge.

The Kraken V4 Pro headphones cost $400 and they are now up for grabs from Razer’s official website, Best Buy, Amazon, and other retail stores.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech and science journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started…
This 43-inch Element TV is only $118 at Walmart today
The Element Xumo TV 4K Smart TV.

When it comes to affordable TVs, brands like Hisense, TCL, and Amazon probably come to mind. We’re betting Walmart shoppers are probably familiar with Element, too. These inexpensive HD and 4K UHD TVs are available in numerous models and sizes, and today, one of the smaller sets is on sale: 

For a limited time, you’ll be able to get the Element 43-inch XUMO 4K Smart TV at Walmart for only $118, which is a $40 markdown from its original $158 price. It’s also on clearance, so once this set is gone, it’s forever-gone. 

Read more
AI headphones driven by Apple M2 can translate multiple speakers at once
Sony WH-1000XM4

Google’s Pixel Buds wireless earbuds have offered a fantastic real-time translation facility for a while now. Over the past few years, brands such as Timkettle have offered similar earbuds for business customers. However, all these solutions can only handle one audio stream at once for translation. 

The folks over at the University of Washington (UW) have developed something truly remarkable in the form of AI-driven headphones that can translate the voice of multiple speakers at once. Think of it as a polyglot in a crowded bar, able to understand the speech of people around him, speaking in different languages, all at once. 

Read more
Audio gear prices are climbing, but for how long?
Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones: Earcup/logo close-up.

The trade war between the U.S. and overseas countries like China no longer poses a theoretical risk of price increases on audio gear -- those higher prices are here. Bose told Digital Trends that starting Monday, May 12, it will bump the price of its flagship QuietComfort Ultra Headphones from $429 to $449, while its sleek SoundLink Home Bluetooth speaker will increase from $219 to $229.

Bose might be the best-known audio brand so far to announce price increases for its U.S. retail customers, but it’s far from the only one. Onkyo told me its new powered speakers, which it debuted at CES 2025, are each going up by $50: The GX-30ARC is now $349 per pair (previously $299), and the smaller GX-10DB is now $249 per pair (before, it was $199).

Read more