Creative has updated its roster of PCIe sound cards for PC desktop DIYers. The new Sound Blaster Audigy FX Pro 7.1, launched today, sits atop the Audigy add-in-card line. The new card’s design and features aim to make it a clear upgrade for builders who feel their motherboard's onboard audio is lackluster, but who don’t want to splurge into audiophile territory. This new product is available today, priced at $79.99.
Key features of the Sound Blaster Audigy FX Pro 7.1 include, most obviously, its support for 7.1 surround sound. Current Audigy PCIe stablemates are limited to 5.1 audio. Additionally, PC DIYers will probably appreciate this card’s high-resolution 32-bit / 384 kHz playback, built-in headphone amplification, and “the debut of the all-new Creative Nexus app,” reckons Creative.
The scope for sound shaping and the quality of the new Nexus app, described as a “unified dashboard for PC audio,” can’t be taken for granted. So many component and peripheral makers fall flat with their software offerings. Luckily, we have a Sound Blaster Audigy FX Pro 7.1 in the labs for testing, so please stay tuned for our judgment.
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Please note that the minimum system requirements only mention Windows PC drivers, and the Nexus app is Windows only.
As for features, the Nexus app offers fine-tune adjustments to audio, or you can just use Auto EQ for quick sound optimization. Sound Blaster Acoustic Engine enhancements are also on tap to suit different content and listening preferences.
Shifting our focus back to the hardware, and physically, this is a low-profile design card, which includes a half-height bracket in the box. It should fit in most systems with a spare PCIe 1x to 16x slot.
Though many of the key audio quality specs you see above line up with the best widely available on-board audio solutions, such as the ALC1220 codec, Creative asserts that its hardware will deliver “clearer playback, more immersive surround, stronger headphone performance, and smarter day-to-day audio control.” Indeed, offloading your sound processing to a dedicated card should at least benefit from improved electrical noise isolation, cleaner dedicated power regulation, higher-quality DACs and op-amps, and more.
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Creative notes that “audio remains one of the most overlooked upgrades,” and I’d say that’s true, going by my previous experiences of replacing motherboard audio solutions with affordable PCIe sound cards. Thus, it is going to be interesting to see (hear?) if this is still the case in 2026, when our review goes live. Stay tuned…
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