Introduction
Geekfly is the American based company that specializes in wireless audio products. They are focusing on developed thri-bird configuration TWS earbuds, which has a piezoelectric driver beside of the typical DD and BA drivers. The Geekfly GF8s is the successor of the original GF8, which used the 1DD+1BA+10 layers piezoelectric, the price of it is $219USD.
Disclaimer
I would like to thanks Penon audio for given this opportunity, and the review will be based on my honest opinion through the music I listen to.
Package & Accessories
The GF8s come with the small and compact box, there are the GF8s’s illustration at the front cover with the brand name, model name and other information, whereas the specifications at the rear side of it. After remove the cover and open the box, there are the earbuds themself along with the charging case sited in the foam orderly. The ear tips and the charging cable are store in the black box which is located at the bottom of the box.
Accessories list:
1 pair x GF8s TWS Earbuds
1 pcs x Charging Case
3 pairs x Silicone Ear Tips (S, M, L)
1 pcs x USB A To USB Type C Charging Cable
Design & Build & Comfort
The GF8s has a simple and well ergonomic design, it is finished in black color with the polished grey faceplate in mirror finished. There are the LED indicator located at the upper corner of the front faceplate, while at the rear side there is the L&R indicator to show left and right. There are microphones on the upper corner of the faceplate on each of earbuds, which share same place of the LED indicator.
The design on the charging case is simple and compact. The case are finished in polished mirror black color, at the top of the case there is the Geekfly logo sported. The USB C charging port is located at the back of the case, along with the LED indicator. There is the specifications of the earbuds located at the bottom of the charging case.
The build on both of earbuds and charging case are pretty good but feel somehow plasticity when asked the price, especially the charging case. The earbuds are made with three type of materials, the plastic faceplate and shell with the metal nozzle. The earbuds and charging case are well rounded and their is no sharp edges or gap between the joints at all. The charging case has average open and closing experience. The female USB charging port are well constructed. It has no water and dust resistant.
The comfort on GF8s is pretty good, beside form the large shell, it has really well ergonomic design. It has moderate length nozzle, so it can fit in the ear canal pretty well. It provide the average isolation, and there will be pressure build up after few hours of listening.
Control & Paring
The controls of GF8s are touch controls and it is averagely responded.
Left earbuds:
Long press 5sec: Power on/off
Tap once: Pause/Play/Answer the call
Tap two times: Pause/Play/Reject the call
Tap three times: Next track
Long press 3sec: Voice assistant
Right earbuds:
Long press 5sec : Power on/off
Tap once: Pause/Play/Answer the call
Tap two times: Pause/Play/Reject the call
Tap three times: Previous track
Long press 3sec: Voice assistant
The first time paring require the users to pair it manually. By putting the earbuds back in the charging case the take it out, once the blue&red indicator is flashing, you can connect the earbuds through your devices. After this, the earbuds will automatically pair to the devices once the charging case is open, the paring speed is really fast, it will be connected before you put it on your ears. The GF8s can be used in single earbuds, but the functionality is not as good as the both earbuds on.
Microphone quality
The microphone on GF8s catch the human voice averagely with some noise from surround. There some robotic sound and sometimes it can be loose.
Connectivity & Latency
The connectivity are really stable, they are no significant single lost in most of cases. There are slightly single lost or not stable situations on the public transports or shopping center as well.
The latency on GF8s are quite significant while gaming, but not at all when watching movie or listen to music, probably just about a millions seconds.
Operational distance & Battery life
The operating distance on the GF8s is around 10-12 meters. It has stable connection until 10 meters, after that the single will not be as stable as before 10 meters.
The battery life are above average for its size and price. The earbuds themself have 5hrs of playback times, plus the 20hrs on charging case, so you get totally 25hrs of playback times, which is pretty solid. After I test it out, the earbuds themself can play around 4.5hrs for single charge by using 35% of volume, while the charging case can a least fully charged for 3 times. The earbuds charging process is average, you can get 1hrs of play back times by charging it for 30 minutes. The earbuds can be fuller charge by less than a hours, whereas the charging case can be fully charge by around a hours.
Technical specifications:
Bluetooth version: 5.0
Charging interface: type-c
Power input: DC5V/600mAh
Headphone battery capacity: 3.7V/70mAh
Charging compartment battery capacity: 3.7V/700mAh
Supporting agreement: HSP1.2/HFP1.7/A2DP1.3/AVRCP1.6/SPP1.2/PBAP1.0
Sensitivity: 106dB
Frequency range: 20-50khz
Impedance: 10Ω
Sound
Paring
I pair the Air Pro to the iPhone 12 and Fiio M11 and play through my music library.
Overall tonality
The GF8s has a mildly U shape tonality, with a clear and smooth presentation.
Bass
The bass is rich with good amount of texture. The sub bass has above average extension with moderate decay speed, there are good amount of mid bass, which carry through a touch of warmth midrange without being muddy. It has average amount rumble, impact and punch. The bass has good levels of control, Whereas the detail retrieval and clarity are above average.
Mids
The midrange is slightly recessed but remaining the good balanced, it has a smooth and clear presentation. The lower midrange has moderate amount of bodies presented in clean manner. The upper midrange is well emphasized with good transparency levels, it is presented in lively and smooth manner. The midrange has really good levels of detail retrieval and clarity, especially for the TWS earbuds.
Treble
The treble are extended well with slightly bright tonality. The lower treble is clear yet well controlled, and it is slightly pronounced than the upper treble. The upper treble has good amount of sparkle and airiness. It also has good levels of crispness on the top end. The detail retrieval and clarity are above the average.
Soundstage and imaging
The soundstage width is above average, depth is average.
The imaging is pretty well done for TWS earbuds.
Comparison
Lyperteck Tevi ($90USD)
Bass
The bass has more mid bass quantity on the GF8s with better sub bass extension. The bass has warmer and lusher tonality on the GF8s, where the Tevi sound cleaner with less bodies. There are fuller rumble with more impact on the GF8s, where the Tevi is generally tighter and faster. The detail retrieval and clarity are both really good.
Mids
The midrange has more neutral tone on the Tevi with less V shape tone. The lower midrange has more bodies and sound warmer and lusher on the GF8s, where the Tevi is leaner. The upper midrange on both are forwarded, but the GF8s has more vividly presentation with higher transparency levels. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
Treble
The treble has better extension and more intimate presentation on GF8s. The lower treble has more energy and sound brighter on the Tevi, where the GF8s is smoother here. The upper treble has more airiness and sparkle on the GF8s, while the Tevi tend to roll off here. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
Soundstage and imaging
The soundstage is wider and deeper on GF8s.
The imaging is better on GF8s.
Samsung galaxy buds pro ($199USD)
Bass
The sub bass on both have same amount of quality and quantity. The mid bass has more bodies and sound fuller on the GF8s, where the Pro sound leaner and clearer. There are fuller impact on the GF8s with better slam, on the other hand, the Pro sound cleaner with better sense of tightness. The detail retrieval and clarity are both pretty good.
Mids
The midrange has leaner and more neutral tonality on the Pro, where the GF8s is fuller and also warmer. The lower midrange has better texture and sound fuller and deeper on the GF8s. The upper midrange sound more vividly and lively on GF8s, where as the Pro sound smoother. The detail retrieval and clarity is slightly better on Pro.
Treble
The treble has better extension on the GF8s and it sound crisper. The lower treble on both are fairly similar, but the GF8s has more ultimate presentation. The upper treble has more air and sparkle on hr top end of GF8s, where the Pro is less here. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
Soundstage and imaging
The soundstage is wider on GF8s, with same levels of depth.
The imaging are both well done.
Airpods pro ($249USD)
Bass
The sub bass on both extended well. The mid bass has more quantity and sound fuller on the GF8s, where the Pro sound cleaner. There are fuller rumble with better impact on the GF8s, where the Pro has quicker decay speed. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on Pro.
Mids
The midrange on both has warmer than neutral and owning the mildly U shape tonality. The lower midrange has slightly more bodies with more texture on the Pro, where the GF8s sound slightly cleaner. The upper midrange sound fuller and smoother on the Pro, on the other hand, the GF8s sound more vividly and relatively sharper. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
Treble
The treble extended further on the GF8s and sound brighter. The lower treble sound crisper with more energy on GF8s, where the Pro sound smoother without any harshness. The upper treble is early roll off on he Pro p, where the GF8s has more open presentation with more airiness. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
The soundstage is wider on GF8s and slightly better sense of depth also.
The imaging is tad better on GF8s.
Conclusion
The Geekfly GF8s is a outstanding IEMs, it has a sound quality and technical performance that is on par with most of great wired IEMs out there for its price range. The tonality on the GF8s are extremely well tuned, with full bodies bass, clear yet smooth midrange, and fast yet extended treble. The GF8s is definitely the best TWS earbuds for audiophile in term of the sound, and even bring shame on a lot of wired IEMs out there. Thanks for reading, Happy Listening!!
Geekfly official website: https://geekflyaudio.com/
Geekfly GF8s products page:
https://penonaudio.com/geekfly-gf8s.html
Geekfly is the American based company that specializes in wireless audio products. They are focusing on developed thri-bird configuration TWS earbuds, which has a piezoelectric driver beside of the typical DD and BA drivers. The Geekfly GF8s is the successor of the original GF8, which used the 1DD+1BA+10 layers piezoelectric, the price of it is $219USD.

Disclaimer
I would like to thanks Penon audio for given this opportunity, and the review will be based on my honest opinion through the music I listen to.
Package & Accessories
The GF8s come with the small and compact box, there are the GF8s’s illustration at the front cover with the brand name, model name and other information, whereas the specifications at the rear side of it. After remove the cover and open the box, there are the earbuds themself along with the charging case sited in the foam orderly. The ear tips and the charging cable are store in the black box which is located at the bottom of the box.


Accessories list:
1 pair x GF8s TWS Earbuds
1 pcs x Charging Case
3 pairs x Silicone Ear Tips (S, M, L)
1 pcs x USB A To USB Type C Charging Cable

Design & Build & Comfort
The GF8s has a simple and well ergonomic design, it is finished in black color with the polished grey faceplate in mirror finished. There are the LED indicator located at the upper corner of the front faceplate, while at the rear side there is the L&R indicator to show left and right. There are microphones on the upper corner of the faceplate on each of earbuds, which share same place of the LED indicator.


The design on the charging case is simple and compact. The case are finished in polished mirror black color, at the top of the case there is the Geekfly logo sported. The USB C charging port is located at the back of the case, along with the LED indicator. There is the specifications of the earbuds located at the bottom of the charging case.


The build on both of earbuds and charging case are pretty good but feel somehow plasticity when asked the price, especially the charging case. The earbuds are made with three type of materials, the plastic faceplate and shell with the metal nozzle. The earbuds and charging case are well rounded and their is no sharp edges or gap between the joints at all. The charging case has average open and closing experience. The female USB charging port are well constructed. It has no water and dust resistant.


The comfort on GF8s is pretty good, beside form the large shell, it has really well ergonomic design. It has moderate length nozzle, so it can fit in the ear canal pretty well. It provide the average isolation, and there will be pressure build up after few hours of listening.


Control & Paring
The controls of GF8s are touch controls and it is averagely responded.
Left earbuds:
Long press 5sec: Power on/off
Tap once: Pause/Play/Answer the call
Tap two times: Pause/Play/Reject the call
Tap three times: Next track
Long press 3sec: Voice assistant
Right earbuds:
Long press 5sec : Power on/off
Tap once: Pause/Play/Answer the call
Tap two times: Pause/Play/Reject the call
Tap three times: Previous track
Long press 3sec: Voice assistant
The first time paring require the users to pair it manually. By putting the earbuds back in the charging case the take it out, once the blue&red indicator is flashing, you can connect the earbuds through your devices. After this, the earbuds will automatically pair to the devices once the charging case is open, the paring speed is really fast, it will be connected before you put it on your ears. The GF8s can be used in single earbuds, but the functionality is not as good as the both earbuds on.
Microphone quality
The microphone on GF8s catch the human voice averagely with some noise from surround. There some robotic sound and sometimes it can be loose.
Connectivity & Latency
The connectivity are really stable, they are no significant single lost in most of cases. There are slightly single lost or not stable situations on the public transports or shopping center as well.
The latency on GF8s are quite significant while gaming, but not at all when watching movie or listen to music, probably just about a millions seconds.
Operational distance & Battery life
The operating distance on the GF8s is around 10-12 meters. It has stable connection until 10 meters, after that the single will not be as stable as before 10 meters.
The battery life are above average for its size and price. The earbuds themself have 5hrs of playback times, plus the 20hrs on charging case, so you get totally 25hrs of playback times, which is pretty solid. After I test it out, the earbuds themself can play around 4.5hrs for single charge by using 35% of volume, while the charging case can a least fully charged for 3 times. The earbuds charging process is average, you can get 1hrs of play back times by charging it for 30 minutes. The earbuds can be fuller charge by less than a hours, whereas the charging case can be fully charge by around a hours.
Technical specifications:
Bluetooth version: 5.0
Charging interface: type-c
Power input: DC5V/600mAh
Headphone battery capacity: 3.7V/70mAh
Charging compartment battery capacity: 3.7V/700mAh
Supporting agreement: HSP1.2/HFP1.7/A2DP1.3/AVRCP1.6/SPP1.2/PBAP1.0
Sensitivity: 106dB
Frequency range: 20-50khz
Impedance: 10Ω
Sound
Paring
I pair the Air Pro to the iPhone 12 and Fiio M11 and play through my music library.

Overall tonality
The GF8s has a mildly U shape tonality, with a clear and smooth presentation.
Bass
The bass is rich with good amount of texture. The sub bass has above average extension with moderate decay speed, there are good amount of mid bass, which carry through a touch of warmth midrange without being muddy. It has average amount rumble, impact and punch. The bass has good levels of control, Whereas the detail retrieval and clarity are above average.
Mids
The midrange is slightly recessed but remaining the good balanced, it has a smooth and clear presentation. The lower midrange has moderate amount of bodies presented in clean manner. The upper midrange is well emphasized with good transparency levels, it is presented in lively and smooth manner. The midrange has really good levels of detail retrieval and clarity, especially for the TWS earbuds.
Treble
The treble are extended well with slightly bright tonality. The lower treble is clear yet well controlled, and it is slightly pronounced than the upper treble. The upper treble has good amount of sparkle and airiness. It also has good levels of crispness on the top end. The detail retrieval and clarity are above the average.
Soundstage and imaging
The soundstage width is above average, depth is average.
The imaging is pretty well done for TWS earbuds.
Comparison
Lyperteck Tevi ($90USD)
Bass
The bass has more mid bass quantity on the GF8s with better sub bass extension. The bass has warmer and lusher tonality on the GF8s, where the Tevi sound cleaner with less bodies. There are fuller rumble with more impact on the GF8s, where the Tevi is generally tighter and faster. The detail retrieval and clarity are both really good.
Mids
The midrange has more neutral tone on the Tevi with less V shape tone. The lower midrange has more bodies and sound warmer and lusher on the GF8s, where the Tevi is leaner. The upper midrange on both are forwarded, but the GF8s has more vividly presentation with higher transparency levels. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
Treble
The treble has better extension and more intimate presentation on GF8s. The lower treble has more energy and sound brighter on the Tevi, where the GF8s is smoother here. The upper treble has more airiness and sparkle on the GF8s, while the Tevi tend to roll off here. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
Soundstage and imaging
The soundstage is wider and deeper on GF8s.
The imaging is better on GF8s.
Samsung galaxy buds pro ($199USD)
Bass
The sub bass on both have same amount of quality and quantity. The mid bass has more bodies and sound fuller on the GF8s, where the Pro sound leaner and clearer. There are fuller impact on the GF8s with better slam, on the other hand, the Pro sound cleaner with better sense of tightness. The detail retrieval and clarity are both pretty good.
Mids
The midrange has leaner and more neutral tonality on the Pro, where the GF8s is fuller and also warmer. The lower midrange has better texture and sound fuller and deeper on the GF8s. The upper midrange sound more vividly and lively on GF8s, where as the Pro sound smoother. The detail retrieval and clarity is slightly better on Pro.
Treble
The treble has better extension on the GF8s and it sound crisper. The lower treble on both are fairly similar, but the GF8s has more ultimate presentation. The upper treble has more air and sparkle on hr top end of GF8s, where the Pro is less here. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
Soundstage and imaging
The soundstage is wider on GF8s, with same levels of depth.
The imaging are both well done.
Airpods pro ($249USD)
Bass
The sub bass on both extended well. The mid bass has more quantity and sound fuller on the GF8s, where the Pro sound cleaner. There are fuller rumble with better impact on the GF8s, where the Pro has quicker decay speed. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on Pro.
Mids
The midrange on both has warmer than neutral and owning the mildly U shape tonality. The lower midrange has slightly more bodies with more texture on the Pro, where the GF8s sound slightly cleaner. The upper midrange sound fuller and smoother on the Pro, on the other hand, the GF8s sound more vividly and relatively sharper. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
Treble
The treble extended further on the GF8s and sound brighter. The lower treble sound crisper with more energy on GF8s, where the Pro sound smoother without any harshness. The upper treble is early roll off on he Pro p, where the GF8s has more open presentation with more airiness. The detail retrieval and clarity is better on GF8s.
The soundstage is wider on GF8s and slightly better sense of depth also.
The imaging is tad better on GF8s.
Compare to my relatively more objective Head-fi star ranking, this ranking will be more subjective based on my personal preference and it doesn’t take price into my consideration.
Scoring system:
4/10 and below: Waste of money
5/10: Average
6/10: Above average
7/10: Good
8/10: Great
9/10: Excellent
10/10: OMG
Geekfly GF8s:
Overall tonality: 7/10
Bass: 7/10
Mids: 6/10
Treble: 6/10
Overall: 6.5/10
Scoring system:
4/10 and below: Waste of money
5/10: Average
6/10: Above average
7/10: Good
8/10: Great
9/10: Excellent
10/10: OMG
Geekfly GF8s:
Overall tonality: 7/10
Bass: 7/10
Mids: 6/10
Treble: 6/10
Overall: 6.5/10
Conclusion
The Geekfly GF8s is a outstanding IEMs, it has a sound quality and technical performance that is on par with most of great wired IEMs out there for its price range. The tonality on the GF8s are extremely well tuned, with full bodies bass, clear yet smooth midrange, and fast yet extended treble. The GF8s is definitely the best TWS earbuds for audiophile in term of the sound, and even bring shame on a lot of wired IEMs out there. Thanks for reading, Happy Listening!!
Geekfly official website: https://geekflyaudio.com/
Geekfly GF8s products page:
https://penonaudio.com/geekfly-gf8s.html

Thanks for the review.
On the other hand, it's strange that the same device could have been added twice... xDDDDD
https://www.head-fi.org/showcase/geekfly-gf8s.25004/reviews#review-25431
By the way, this TWS is very good, don't think they are all like that. I had to chew a lot of sand to get to these.