The mutli-room speaker company’s third soundbar charms HFC with its smart tech and strong audio performanceYou certainly can’t accuse Sonos of resting on its laurels.
The mutli-room speaker company’s third soundbar charms HFC with its smart tech and strong audio performanceYou certainly can’t accuse Sonos of resting on its laurels.
A Sonos soundbar is too expensive for many but the new Beam makes it affordable, plus brings new features. Here's our full Sonos Beam review.
I’m usually not a fan of soundbars because of their limited audio quality, but Sonos has been putting out some decent ones like the Sonos Beam that was first out in Singapore back in July.
Sonos’ vision of entertainment has always been more open house than invite-only, and with Amazon Alexa, Apple AirPlay 2, and the Google Assistant on the horizon, the new Sonos Beam epitomizes that ethos more than ever.
Sounds great in a small to mid-sized room; Assistant-agnostic approach is admirable; Affordable; Does a good job of handling multiple services
Very expensive in a 5.1 surround configuration; Takes up an HDMI port; Not every assistant works in the same way
Sonos has launched its most affordable soundbar to date and has entered a tough segment where it delivers great performance compared to the competition. For its compact size, it delivers good treble and mid-tone performance at both low and high volume. These are Beam’s main strengths.
Good mid-tones; Design & build quality; Decent 3D effect despite its size; Apple Airplay 2
Distorts at high volume; Weak bass; No Dolby Atmos; Only 1 HDMI port
The Sonos Beam packs multi-room, multi-service audio streaming and Amazon's Alexa voice assistant into a deceptively small soundbar.
Powerful sound for its size; Built-in Amazon Alexa voice assistant; Easily expanded with additional Sonos speakers.
No Bluetooth; Optional subwoofer is expensive.
Sonos’ compact, Alexa-enabled soundbar offers impressive performance for the price. All in all, a smart value.
Affordable price; Alexa voice control; Links with other Sonos speakers
More optimized for TV sound than music; Requires HDMI ARC for voice control of TV
If you’ve been tempted to get into Sonos, but weren’t sure where to start, the Beam is for you. Not only is it a relatively affordable, solid speaker in its own right, it is a capable soundbar and Alexa assistant rolled into one.
Excellent overall sound; HDMI port for TV control; AirPlay 2 support; Reasonably priced
Sound is less impactful in bigger rooms; No support for other smart assistants (yet); No auxiliary input
Sonos recently announced a new soundbar they call the Sonos Beam . I’ve had some time to test it and simply to use it, and the Beam might be the most impressive speaker I’ve tested from Sonos yet, especially considering its US$399 price tag .
Easy setup; great, full sound; lower cost-of-entry than other Sonos home theater speakers; better sound and more flexible than Apple’s HomePod.
Only works with other Sonos speakers for surround sound and subwoofer; With a $699 Sonos SUB as the only subwoofer option, that’s a pricey step.
Sonos has always gone its own way. The speaker manufacturer dedicated itself to network-connected speakers before there were home networks and they sold a tablet-like remote control before there were tablets. Their surround sound systems install quickly and run seamlessly.
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