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Sony WF-1000XM6 Review: My New Favorite Earbuds

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Why This Matters

The Sony WF-1000XM6 earbuds showcase significant advancements in noise cancellation and passive isolation, making them highly appealing for consumers seeking immersive audio experiences. Their innovative use of foam eartips and sophisticated algorithms set a new standard in portable listening, impacting both the tech industry and user expectations for premium earbuds.

Key Takeaways

The small black buds (they also come in a silvery tan) have two microphones visible on the outer shell, simple Sony logos on the side, and a pair of memory-foam eartips in four sizes.

A word to the wise on fit: Once you figure out which size of eartips you want (I stuck with the factory-installed Medium, because I have freakishly average ears), you actually have to twist and compress the foam before you put the earbuds in. This is a key component of why these specific earbuds feel so natural to me, and a huge reason why the noise canceling is so good.

Full noise canceling is impossible due to sound physics, but the nerds at Sony and Bose (and even Apple) have gotten pretty damn close. Adding foam is a good way to cut outside noise passively, with ANC software able to work less hard on top of better passive isolation. The more you can actually remove the outside world from a listener’s world physically, like with foam earplugs, the better you can determine what actually gets through. Foam eartips aren't new; many high-end in-ear headphones have come with them as an option in the past, and the latest AirPods Pro also use a bit of foam in their eartips for similar reasons.

Pair excellent passive isolation with Sony’s top-tier noise canceling algorithms and processing, and you get a nearly unrivaled experience in the world of portable listening. It feels like I have a light switch on the sounds of the outside world. Neighbor mowing the lawn and bothering you? Not anymore. I can’t hear the clicks and clacks of my mechanical keyboard, and can actually feel physically in my chest—rather than actually hear—the 75 decibels (the average real noise level) of simulated airplane cabin noise I pipe in to test headphones when I have no personal flights planned. This type of isolation makes these headphones an utter delight to use for work or other activities where you really want to focus.

When I do want to hear the world around me, the WF-1000XM6 do a tremendous job of achieving what so many before them have attempted: actual audio transparency. The two microphones on the outside of each bud are large and very good at catching everything going on around you. The audio that these mics pipe in when you want it to feel like the earbuds aren’t even there is better than any I have tested.

As I said in the introduction to this review, I spent hours with them on and forgot they were there. I was even listening to music through my normal desktop speakers—a pair of Genelec 8040Bs, for the nerds—during that time. I tested transparency mode on multiple Zoom calls over speakers, and to chat with my wife in person, and nobody ever complained that I was doing that “shout to speak” thing many headphones tend to cause.

Augmented Listening

Sound Connect via Parker Hall

Sony's Sound Connect App features a ton of customizability, and also comes with a few cool Sony-exclusive things that folks might actually want to explore. There is a cool mode, for instance, that allows you to make it sound as though your music is coming from a pair of background speakers, like in a coffee shop. When this is paired with transparency mode, you too can make every moment of your life occur with your own supermarket speakers playing whatever you want. Who said listening to wildly inappropriate ’90s hip-hop while walking your dog past your neighbors couldn't be fun. If you get the right Seinfeld theme song playlist, you can live as Jerry. Who said Augmented Reality wasn’t practical?

I even set a kind, Sony-provided female voice to greet me when I put on the earbuds: “Good morning, today is Tuesday, March 3,” and to tell me the time every hour so I can keep track of it while testing battery life. “*Ding* It’s 8 am.”

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