Night Oblivion Butastur

Ichos

Reviewer at hxosplus
Oblivion
Pros: + Musical and engaging
+ Cohesive sound presentation
+ Natural timbre and tonal balance
+ Bass extension and technicalities
+ Good resolution and refinement
+ Superb mid-range
+ Smooth and mildly forgiving
+ Accurate imaging
+ Easy to drive
+ Tuning switches
+ Lightweight and comfortable
+ High quality modular cable
+ Beautiful carrying case
Cons: - Bass dynamics and impact
- Not that weighty and visceral
- Too much mid-bass for critical applications
- Not class leading transparency
- Intimate soundstage
- Limited selection of ear-tips
Night Oblivion Audio is a new brand exclusively distributed by Penon Audio. Their first born product is an earphone named Butastur. Butastur is a genus of prey birds that consists of four species. One of their main habitats is North and South China so that might explain the naming of the earphone. The Butastur is a collaboration between Night Oblivion Audio and a community member who contributed in the final tuning.

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Technical stuff

The Butastur is a full balanced armature earphone with 10 drivers per side with the following configuration: 2 Sonion drivers for the low, 2 Knowles for mid-low, 4 Knowles for mid-high and 2 Knowles for ultra-high frequencies. Further information regarding the specific type of each driver is not available.

The drivers are combined together with the aid of a three-way crossover that has two tuning switches. The first switch increases the low frequencies and the second increases the high frequencies. You can set both switches to ON position to increase bass and treble simultaneously.

The Penon website also informs us that the Night Oblivion Butastur is using a 110dB air-pressure balancing vent system that prevents resonance and protects against stimulation caused by high frequencies. Furthermore it serves to discharge certain frequencies, protecting ears from hearing damage, offering long term wearing comfort without pressure-build up while it serves as natural air pressure reserve to deliver natural lower-mid and bass resonance.

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Non Audio stuff

The ear-shells of the Butastur are made from skin-friendly resin material using 3D printing technology and they have a glossy faceplate with an attractive black and white, wavy pattern. They are anatomically shaped while they are surprisingly compact and lightweight, considering that they house 10 drivers each.

The earphones are actually very comfortable and offer great wearing experience, suitable for long term listening while passive noise attenuation is good, as long as you fit them snugly. What you should know though, is that the sound nozzle is relatively short in length so people with deep ear cavities might have some trouble achieving a stable fit. Thankfully, double-flange ear-tips are included but triple-flange would be even better.

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Cable etc.

The Butastur comes with a 1.2m long, 2-pin detachable cable that has an interchangeable plug system. Three high quality aluminum (2.5mm, 4.4mm and 3.5mm) straight plugs are included in the package. This is a 4 strands, 6N single crystal copper LITZ cable that is of high quality. It is sturdy and well made, with very low microphonic noise and it doesn't get tangled but it is a little heavier and thicker than the usual. The cable is actually so good that it doesn't come as a surprise that Penon Audio is selling it separately for $49.90.

https://penonaudio.com/Night-Oblivion-Butastur-IEM-Cable.html

The package also includes two types of silicone and one set of double flange ear-tips in three sizes each plus a luxurious carrying case with a magnetic lid. Some extra ear-tips would be much welcomed.

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Drivability

The Night Oblivion Butastur is rated at 30Ω of impedance with 107dB of sensitivity so it is pretty easy to drive and additionally not that sensitive to source noise. Further testing of the Butastur with various sources revealed that it scales quite well, so the better the source you are going to use, the better the performance is going to be. Most of the time, I used the FiiO M15S and iBasso DX260.

Audio stuff

The most notable characteristics of the Night Oblivion Butastur, that leave the deepest impressions upon first listening, are the excellent integration between the ten drivers and the speaker-like quality of the sound presentation. The Butastur is refined and resolving, it has supreme sound cohesiveness and great tonal balance with a mostly natural timbre, sonic qualities that let you immerse into the music to a non stop listening experience. The overall sonic performance is class leading and definitely better than the price would suggest, the Butastur outperforms much of the competition and easily compares with more expensive earphones.

The overall tuning is mostly balanced with just a touch of mid-bass emphasis that adds some cozy warmth without leading into any severe tonal inaccuracies. The bass is not, strictly speaking, neutral and critical but you can't call it out of tune and insufficient for listening to classical music. The overall balance of the low-end is suitable for listening to a wide range of music without doing anything too wrong or heavily emphasizing over the rest of the frequencies. Sub-bass extension is very satisfying and you also have the option to increase its amplitude a little more by using the first switch of the crossover. This action will also add a touch of extra bass and mid-bass, making the Butastur more appealing to bass lovers while respecting the rest of the frequencies.

Technicalities are great, the bass is tight and controlled, fast paced and well defined with crystalline clarity. Layering is also very good, despite the mild mid-bass emphasis, and the listener can easily focus on various bass instruments or listen to the faintest of the notes, no matter how populated the bass line. The Butastur is a good choice for listening to large scale classical music despite its non critical tuning. The low-end textures are not that weighty and visceral, the bass can't sound as full and impactful as it would do with a good dynamic driver. Thus said, the physical impact and the dynamic behavior are surprisingly well done for an earphone that uses two Sonion drivers for the low frequencies. An extra point worth of noting is that the bass is reproduced without any unwanted resonances or excessive reverb.

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The mid-range is masterfully tuned as it manages to sound extremely natural, musical and engaging, effectively reaching into the emotional depths of your favorite tunes. Not subdued or forward, it is balanced and smooth without any upper mid-range glare. The sound is full of fluidity, colorful harmonies and rich overtones, voices and instruments alike are reproduced with plenty of naturalness and speaker-like qualities. The Butastur is lively and lifelike while at the same time smooth and polite. The mid-range is resolving, lush, articulate and well defined with weighty and finely shaped notes, this is an earphone made to touch your heart.

The stock tuning of the treble is easy going and forgiving with a somewhat restrained extension. Still, it is not that lacking in energy and excitement albeit not that luminous and sparkling as some would like. Thankfully you can use the second switch to add a generous boost at the presence and brilliance areas and energize the overall tuning by giving more energy and extension up top to counterbalance the warmer sound signature of the stock position. Boosting or not the treble will not affect the texture of the higher frequencies which is liquid and lush without any hints of metallic or the so-called, balanced armature timbre. The treble region of the Butastur is natural and effortless, the notes have substance and weight, so do expect cymbals, high huts and bells to sound as anticipated and not like paper-thin, fake counterfeits. The timbre is still realistic and organic, instruments sound like real instruments without any metallic sheen, coarseness or dryness. Detail retrieval is great as long as you are not interested in analytical or monitor-like listening style. The details here are to serve the whole picture rather than standing out for their own sake.

The soundstage of the Butastur is not that expanded, not that deep and wide but it has plenty of air and spaciousness as not sound congested even with dense material. The soundstage might be lacking in wideness and depth layering but it compensates with its rather impressive imaging and the ability to convey a holographic sensation.

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Further tuning

There is also a fourth tuning option with both switches of the crossover set to ON. This way you get both the mild bass boost and the generous treble emphasis while keeping intact the balanced mid-range tuning without making it lose its presence. Thus you can enjoy the magnificently engaging mid-range of the Night Oblivion Butastur with a touch of extra bass and treble sizzle.

Conclusion

The Night Oblivion Butastur has a mature tuning that might not appeal to people who like glowing, but short lived pyrotechnics. The Butastur is addressed to more trained ears that value timbre realism and musicality over casual or “exotic” tunings. This is an earphone for listeners who like to relax and immerse themselves in the music, getting carried away by their favorite tunes without compromising on overall technicalities.

The Butastur is a worthy addition to an already heavily saturated market, with an interesting tuning that bravely departs from the beaten track. An earphone that balances technicalities with musicality and sounds as comfortably as it fits. An excellent first effort for the Night Oblivion Audio brand that I wish should not stop here.

The review sample was kindly provided free of charge in exchange for an honest review.

The price of the Night Oblivion Butastur is $599 and is exclusively available from Penon Audio.
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NymPHONOmaniac

Headphoneus Supremus
Pros: -smooth cohesive and natural balance
-warm to gently bright neutral with mellow bass boost
-extremely versatile musicality
-spot on tone and timbre
-dense lush rich natural mids
-weighty non fatiguing thick bass
-good note weight
-wide instrument presence
-master of acoustic instruments and vocal (piano, saxo, violin, cello)
-smooth like butter without the warmth muddyness
-excellent layering and good imaging
-holographic spatiality
-can be use for monitoring or music enjoyment
-rich sound info that scale up with source
-TOTL performance for the price
-jack of all trade, master of tone
-safely tuned without being boring
-excellent cable
-excellent sound value
Cons: -bass is a bit warm in definition of impact
-like always with multi BAs, it lack sparkle-brilliance
-when treble switch on and bass switch off, highs are less refined
-not the cleanest background especially when bass impact occur
-quite intimate soundstage
-will be too maturely tuned for both treble head and basshead
-personaly, im not a fan of more than 1 switch
-and those switch cant be turned with our finger
-a bit capricious in term of ear tips, cable and source pairing (worth the best!)
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TONALITY: 8.8/10
TECHNICALITIES: 9/10
TIMBRE: 8.8/10
SOUNDSTAGE: 8/10
IMAGING: 8.5/10
MUSICALITY (subjective): 8.5/10
CONSTRUCTION: 8.5/10
ACCESSORIES: 9/10
SOUND VALUE: 9/10

INTRO


Not much to say about Night Oblivion company, it's a very mysteriou ''One-Man'' high end IEM maker from China. The Butastur is a special project lead by tuning collaborator American Spirit which have a vision to offer TOTL IEM at affordable price for audiophiloe that don't earn 1M a year.
This is something I tremondesly respect and have big resonance with my personal sound value quest that I pursue for 10 years now.
The Butastur isn't an X Collab for hype like HBB and Crin do, it's way more serious and mature than that and will appeal the audiophile that are connoisseur of tone and timbre rightness, not only those that listen to J pop or Aerosmith.

If you want full info of this project, give a read here:
https://forum.hifiguides.com/t/night-oblivion-discussions/39359

Priced 600$, the Night Oblivion Butastur use 10 high end balanced armature, use 3 way crossover and have 2 switch for a total of 4 tuning balance choice.

It use a 110db air-pressure balancing vent system to avoid hearing fatigue and damage too, as well as pressure built up.

All this is very promsing, but it does put the bar high too in term of expectation so let see in this review if Butastur do achieve it's goal of offering high sound value to all of us, non rich humble people.

But look at this specs if you want to salivate in expectation like me before putting these in my ears!
Specification

Brand: Night Oblivion Audio

Model: Butastur

Driver configuration:

2 Sonion for low frequency

2 Knowles for mid-low frequency

4 Knowles for mid-high frequency

2 Knowles for ultra-high frequency



CONSTRUCTION&ACCESSORIES

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The Butastur is made of 3D printed resin, the shell is quite small for a 10BA too. The finish is smooth and the shape is ergonomicThe 2pin female connector on top of body isn’t recessed or secured which mean connecting 2pin cable can be a bit clumsy, so be cautious to aligned well when connecting since it can be a bit risky to bend the pins.The nozzle is short but thick, its not thinked for deep fit but shallow fit.At the side of housing we have the 2 tuning switch and a venting port above it, which mean their some sound leakage but it’s not loud, passive Isolation I quite good though so I can so this being use on stage.

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About those 2 switch, its the same used with most IEM, Im not sure to approve the design since we need a tool to turn it, while I find the switch of Oriveti OH700VB too long, I think just adding 1 or 2mm length would permit to turn the swithc with our nail, which will be a blessing when on the go.
The small size and smooth medical grade plastic finish make the Butastur very comfotable.

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Then the cable quality is quite incredible and perhaps the best i've never seen included with any IEMs at any price range.
Firstly, just the fact it's a modular is a big plus to me, having all 2.5mm and 4.4mm balanced and 3.5mm single ended plug permit ultimate versatility of use, which is mandatory with me since I own alot of diversify dac-amp, daps and dongle.
It's a 4 shares OCC braided modular cable using single 6n crystal copper litz material. The shares are thick, smooth and flexible. The plug hold well. It feel very sturdy and well built. In term of signal transmission, it keep it lean and dont boost anything, dont had brightness, noise or warmth bump. Butastur are sensitive to cable so depending of your need, this one should be enough.
You can in fact order it now, for 50$, here: https://penonaudio.com/Night-Oblivion-Butastur-IEM-Cable.html

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In term of packaging, it's minimalist in presentation and i'm ok with that because what i care about is the accessories number and quality. In that regard, its very good. As noted the cable is a Big Plus, then we have 9 pairs of ear tips in different model and a nice carrying case. all good but I don't use stock ear tips and wonder why their no short wide bore since im not a fan of double flanged wide bore.




SOUND IMPRESSIONS

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While their 2 switch that offer 4 tuning choice, it’s not night and day difference and you know you listen to the same IEM, with just a hint extra warmth or treble sharpness to spice up your overall warm neutral tonality.

Yes warm neutral with slight bass boost, since we need this boost for this lower mids density but we can say it’s a balanced L shape with natural balance that tend to favor mid range presence and fullness. It’s a smooth and relaxed musicality that aim for naturalness and lushness of vocal and instrument and use the bass part for extra weight in dynamic rendering. It’s a safe tuning too, not an energic WoW effect machine.

‘’Jack of all trade, master of none’’ then? Not really, since it excell in timbre and mids as well as an holographic intimacy with effortless organic sound layering. Simply put: this isn’t an IEM that sound technical, and you’ll be hard pressed to find the 10 BA role in there since they all act in a liquid cohesion. Nothing really feel detached, yet, you can extract all instrument you feel like to, that’s the magic of this IEM, but the spell might not work for everyone since it’s maturely tuned too, even if sligthly bassy I would never consider Oblivion as fun sounding.

The Oblivion are not for: basshead, treble head, those who love their bright instrument to jump in their face, those who need clean air and sparkle on top, those who dislike switch choice anxiety.

The Oblivion might please: those who dislike harsh BA timbre, those who love mid centric IEM, those who love piano-vocal-saxo sweet way, those who want to get immerse for long time in their music without getting hearing fatigue, those who dislike bright and thin presence representation fo their instrument or vocal, those who listen variend music style and seek for a versatile tonality, those who love lively imaging that isnt static or monitoring like.

So back to the switch:
1up1down will be warmest-darkest rendering, but it doesn’t mean it go dull or overly dark, the excellent layering is preserve mostly and I don’t struggle to find percussions because of this.
2UP is most lively and dynamic rendering, we get some upper treble boost from 6khz and above, we got sharper percussions, we got that hazy warmth that stick macro dynamic togheter when bass occur too.
1Down2up is cleanest crispiest rendering but the bass act a bit leaner way, the punch is less tactil while bass line a clearer, its perhaps most plain neutral choice.
2Down is leanest tuning choice, mids are clean but thinner, it’s my least favorite switch choice so ill avoid my mind to absord impressions of this one.

At they end, 2up or 1up2down are only switch I use, which make me conclude 1 switch would be enough. Or none. Since again: this is quite subtle.

Oblivion mean ‘’the state of being unaware or unconscious of what is happening. ‘’, we can say its about getting lost in music without any sound imbalance that will make us aware we listen to an IEM. I think its a very well choosen word for this IEM musicality. Think about IEM like Final E4000 or 64audio U18T kind of natural tonal balance with lush bass and mids, it’s like a cocoon we hide in and can forget the time pass, depending of the mood your in, youll be able to focus on different aspect of song and discover it’s richness in a contemplative way that you are part off, it’s the type of IEM that can give me the envy to look at right or left seeking an instrument presence that cuddle my ears, while the vocal are always near me, in front of me, non shouty way.

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The bass is more about dense tactility than edgy resolution with over textured presence, it got punch but don’t fatigue you with hard thumping, it’s the opposite of a thin resonant bass presentation.
Whatever the switch choice, their will be hint of warmth in bass response, and since it’s balanced armature we do have limitation in flexibility of transient response which will be only problematic for sub bass extension, like the double bass attack release that will feel shorten and not very clean.
The low end favor tone and timbre sweetness, it colored to avoid harsh texture bite or unwanted grain.
The kick drum is round and weighty, but not sharply define since it feel a bit creamy.
The cello is lush, dense, not very vibrant but fully bodied and extremly addictive since it’s superbly layered and you can follow it’s line easily, their no edgy peak, all is buttery here. Unlike with IEM that lack bass or lower mids, the cello can't be confound with violin since its not thin nor too boosted in texture, it's among best tone-timbre I heard from a multi-BA IEM for this instrument.

We have zero unwanted invasive resonance from bass impact, the slam have limited headroom and is thick, it’s a bit opaque and the separation with mids is not sharp or very clean, it do embrace the lower nmid range by the back but never veil whole mid range.
While round, the punch is hazy in edge, this isn’t the most impressive bass performance or tuning I’ve heard for sure, and we have the common sub bass roll off that explain this lack of flexibility.
It seem it’s tune to sweeten mids and add lower harmonic so the tone and timbre feel natural, and my guess is that the small housing for 10BAs inflict on proper spacing of kick and bass line.
For me, the bass is most colored part of spectrum, and while not boomy, we know its a BA woofer. The rendering is mellow and forgiving, with the no1 switch up, you get extre note weight and impact but nothing head banging since it'S all fatigue free here from low to highs.
So, it does excell with instrumental like classical and jazz, and the layering capacity is very good, i just wish slam headroom was a bit wider and midbass punch better define. This qualm is more about dynamic rendering than any tonal issue.

The mid range is the highlight of the show here, it’s so rich and captivating that depending of track you listen to, you’ll often find yourself feeling your right in the middle of your music.
And what is incredible, it’s that nothing is forced at the listener, everything flow smoothly with effortless layering and rich but never edgy resolution.
This is anti shouty mids but I would not call them plain dark, lean or dull at all, while you can get lost in music easily due to lack of spike that will trigger psychoacoustic ‘’defense reaction’’, the 10BAs subtle technical prowess permit a very articulate macro dynamic that extract all instrument presence softly.

The piano sound marvelous, rich and full in tone, not too edgy in definition yet tactile and weight in note impact, the BA speed is there without hard hitting loudness, its musical before being technical yet enough resolved if you want to monitor different instrument in classical or jazz track. Only perhaps the fine details of release pedal can be warm when bass occur since it’s not what I would call cleanest crispest mid range due to dense multi layering when it come to complex music with lot of instruments.

Then both male and female vocal are beautifull, intimate yet not widen or opaquely textured to the point it will mask other instrument, it’s forward with a rounded presence that permit it’s layering to be well articulated with other, timbre is among most natural I’ve heard from a balanced armature, lush, velvety, breathy without overly boosted texture.

The saxophone are very similar, it’s polished without going dark, superbly layered and slightly densify with low harmonic, it’s not thin sounding plasticky saxo like a lot of multi BA that are too bright or bass light. Natural timbre then? Absolutely!

To some extend, I would call mids as ‘’romantic monitor’’ in the sens it’s easy to track instrument even if presence is smoothed a bit and not very abrasive in texture.
It’s evident the tuner of these give a lot of care to acoustic instrument because these shine with classical and jazz as well as all range of vocal.

Then the treble is a bit like the bass for me, it’s very good but whatever the number used, we have some BA compromise especially in term of crisp sparkle and brilliance, as well, it’s not very open sounding and will not add extra air a lot to spatiality.

Their some instance I find the percussions over focused, it happen with no2 switch up, not really with both up or not at all with no1switch up. Yet this mean it’s not a boring or lifeless or too lean treble too, it’s lively and very very generous with soud info, though not in the way plain treble or analytical head will think. As well, it's never splashy or trebly, i just go intensely nit picking here, within the 10 BAs used, their perhaps one more edgy than the rest, but it doesn't affect timbre cohesion nor balance.

Firstly, apart the sparkle, it’s near perfect treble to me, in the sens I don’t feel percussions or instrument are ‘’half cook’’, even with EST this can happen that it sound overly metallic and thin, lacking the air withint the release which is natural with these, just a bit scooped and warmed in release especially crash cybals and highly vibrating instrument.

In fact, their 2 Butastur to my ears: the one with slight bass warmth that blur noise floor and the one without which goes cleaner, more neutral and more resolved. This explain why I enjoy more these with instrumental or bass light music than electronic, pop, soul, R&B and Rap.
But overall treble is smoothly balanced still, rather safe from lower to upper highs.

Back to percussions, hit hats can sound very good, snappy and tight and full, not fuzzy, then the tabla too is super round and natural, well controlled, very well layered. Complex percussions with multiple layering are effortlessly extracted and fast in attack without going piercing. It’s not super spacious and I miss a bit of stereo wideness. But it’s rare I find myself being impress by percussions timbre, which is the case here.
Even if I complaint about slight lack of brilliance, it’s not a real concern for the acoustic guitar unless you want it’s metallic string super textured and resonant. Here it’s well balanced and full sounding, it don’t lack low harmonic yet don’t dominate or blur the body of instrument, sure the string pulling isn’t sharpess but timbre, tone and balance is excellent as well as layering of instrument in folk or rock song.
For harpsichord, we would need more metallic brilliance, but unlike a lot of IEM, this instrument don’t sound distant nor plain wonky, just lacking this sharp brilliance.

All in all, its a safe, mature and refined treble that extend in a lean way, doesnt sound thin or BA metallic and can extract micro details effortlessly without forcing the listener to look at it. It's not analytical, don't extend up to 20khz in a boosted way nor add alot of air on top.


The Soundstage is only downside of this IEM I can nitpick, it does sound a bit stock in your head with minimal stereo openess. It’s very focus on center stage presentation. Its taller than wider and deeper. It’s not airy nor crisp. By some miracle it avoid to be muddy in macro dynamic and layering, but I would never suggest those to big soundstage lover.

Oddly enough, the imaging is very good even if not boosted in definition edge of instrument. This is due to excellent layering of each instrument that are fully extracted and positioned in an effortless way. This positioning is better with bass switch OFF, as well, it's not very edgy or brighten in definition in presence so lazy ears might struggle more. I would never say it's best IEM imaging i've heard though.




SIDE NOTE

At 30ohm of impedance and 107db of sensitivity, the Butastur benefit of clean powerfull source but don't need crazy amping, a min of 100mW@32ohm would be suggested. I find it to sound cleaner with low impedance source, but again, it's not the most sensitive and will not get bass distortion or hissing with source that have lower than 2ohm of impedance. Ill suggest lower than 1ohm though.

Then, they are capricious about ear tips, since the nozzle is wide and have 4 holes in it, it need a wide bore to don't compress it's loudness release and permit a more open spatiality which is much needed.

Then the stock cable is excellent and don't force the consumer for urgent upgrade, yet, I can't hide the fact it pair extremely well with Simgot LC7 cable, this was quite a revealation how it clean spatiality, deepen soundstage, slightly improve imaging and resolution while keeping core dynamic balance. This and stock Butastur a my 2 fav cable to use for this IEM, and I own about 50 good cables.




COMPARISONS

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VS Penon Turbo (5BAs+4switch-550$)

Even without big bass boost ON, the Turbo is bassier, its more U shape too with greater focus on sub bass boost and less round and controlled impact than more neutral to L shape sounding Butastur.
So, it’s warmer too, the bass move more air, have wider slam headroom and darker overall resolution. In fact, Butastur sub bass feel roll off in release even before this comparison, so Turbo sure offer more rumble and fun overall, bass line are better layered and extract too, less lean and prompt to be over shdow with mids and treble multi layering. Butastur has rounder mid bass and better kick and bass line layering, in leaner way.

The the mids are warmer and lusher with Turbo, smoother too and presence feel more wide open, less centered and compressed in middle stage. Resolution is superior with Butastur as well as transparency, layering and proper definition of instrument. Vocal are a bit more edgy and prompt to minimal sibilance with the Butastur, so while mids are darker with the Turbo, tone is thicker and more natural with greater lower mids coloring. Overall mids are more laid back, have more note weight and density with Turbo.

Treble is brighter and more generous with sound info micro details with Butastur, percussions are better resolved and faster and more controlled in attack. Instrument gain extra definition edge in macro resolution too. So, Turbo is overall darker and more colored with warmth.

Soundstage is where the Turbo is undoubtly superior in out of your head, wide and tall spatiality, making Butastur feel quite intimate and close to your head.

Imaging is clearly superior with Butastur even of sound layering is more spacious with Turbo here the fact it use 2 times less BA’s sure limit it’s resolution and imaging sharpness potential. The Butastur is good enough to be use as monitor IEM, I would never say this for Turbo.

All in all, the Butastur sound more technical and less fun than Turbo, but it’s technical performance is superior in everything but soundstage size, which is surely due to a too small housing used to properly implement 10BAs…


VS BGVP DM9 (1DD+4BAs+4EST-650$)

The DM9 are more W shape, analytical and agressively crisp.

The bass has more sub bass extension and rumble, wider headroom, less mid bass roundness, it feel more flexible and less one tone than Butastur BA woofer too, thanks for dynamic driver.

Mids are sharper, edgier, brighter and crisper, it’s more open sounding and airy. Vocal and instrument are more transparent and thinner too. Presence is wider again less compressed in middle stage. Presence is more boosted too. Butastur have more natural and dense mids, less textured, lusher, more upfront too without going as loud in upper mids.

Treble is notably crispe, more sparkly, brilliant and airy with DM9, underlining again that BA can’t produce proper sparkle. Yet, highs are more cohesive and balanced with Butastur and don’t distract as much when it come to percussions, it’s fuller leaner sounding, thicker and it’s less spicy than DM9. Its less clean and airy on top too as well as less extended, percussions aren’t as sharply snappy, don’t release natural resonance as much nor have well define clean attack.

Soundstage is again superior with DM9, now wider, taller and deeper. Cleaner too.

Imaging is about on par but the Butastur feel more neutral.

All in all, apart both bass and treble extension as well as soundstage, Butastur is superior on technical performance and tonal balance is more natural and cohesive.

VS Kinera Skuld (5BAs-500$)

Skuld are notably more mid centric with both bass and treble being more roll off.

The bass is thinner, have less impact and near zero sub bass body compared to lusher, chunkier and more impactfull one of Butastur, the separation is less bleedy, kick drum is a bit more texture but not as dense and its harder to feel it’s note weight. It can feel a bit detached too, not as cohesive and balanced as the Butastur, in other word it feel distant in the mix but more boosted in texture presence.

The mids are more forwards and bright but less bodied, it seem all about female vocal which are better resolve and more focused, more plain upfront than slightly leaner darker mids of the Butastur. Vocal presence is wider too and a bit more open, surely because upper mids are more boosted and lower mids leaner. Female vocal captivate me more with the Skuld, even if I have no choice but focus on them. To note, male vocal are thinner even if brighter with the Skuld too.

The treble of Butastur dig slightly more sound info, which translate in fuller music restitution as well as more numerous amount of sound layer, Skuld seem to lost some sound info in the mix, like percussions of other range in very busy music but it’s not that much darker, in fact highs are more edgy and dynamic, but guitar will not have as much brillance. Both these IEM don’t blow my mind with their treble and Butastur being leaner and more refined, it attrack less attention and feel evern more understated than Skuld even if we have more micro details, you must give listening effort to find them. Lower treble is more boosted and brighter with Skuld and while for Butastur its the bass the can cream highs sharpness, for Skuld its upper mids, vocal, saxo that will shadow some details.

Soundstage of both these IEM isnt impressive, so I would say on par here.

Imaging is better with Butastur due to super multi layering of each instrument, but for vocal staging I will go Skuld.

All in all, their no doubt Butastur is super in both tonal balance and technical performance, Skuld is more nichely tuned and only suggested for female vocal enjoyment which is more focus and lively than Butastur.


CONCLUSION

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In 600$ price bracket, it’s near impossible to find an IEM using 10 high end balanced armature, for this you’ll need to climb up to something like 64audio U12T that offer similar performance with a more U shape tonal balance as well as bigger soundstage.

Just in term of plain price value, the Butastur is incredible, but as if it wasn’t enough it deliver a mature, smooth and gently bassy tonality that is very versatile for wide range of music as well as fatigue free for long listening session.

If you’r afraid of thin mids or bad BA timbre, don’t be with the Butastur which is all about naturalness of tone and balance, free of distracting unbalance spike.

With the right ear tips, source and cable, the Butastur can deliver TOTL audio experience which is holographic, warm, highly captivating in number of effortless sound layers that surround the listener in a cozzy intimacy.

The switch permit to use the Butastur as monitor or fun relaxed listening IEM that can go, add that to it's versatile tonality and you'r in for long term value that will grow more and more on you.


All in all, the Butastur is a fabulous IEM and one of my fav discovery of 2023, which is a year i've heard 64audio U12t and U18T too, which I don't feel like keeping, unlike the Butastur.

Yet, my overwhelming enthusiasm is subjective and I feel some people need more unbalanced tonality with more agressive treble, bass or mids, this mean the Butastur will mostly appeal those that are fan of Final E4000, 64audio U18T, Aroma Thunder smooth but rich slightly bassy tonality that don't overly favor bass or highs to the detriment of mids presence and fullness.

For those the Butastur are:

Very Highly recommended!!!







-------------------------------------


PS: I want to thanks Penon for sending me this review sample after I manifest them my intense curiosity about Butastur. As always, this is my subjectivist point of view which can't be biased. As well, i'm not participating to any form of affiliation program or $ earning tactic with Penon or any audio companies.

You can order the Night Oblivion butastur for 599$ here:
https://penonaudio.com/Night-Oblivion-Butastur.html
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Erkil
Erkil
Nice! Like your review and agree. I find the Butastur good for many genres and much of the music I like.
mars chan
mars chan
Nice review, very informative.
Neithan
Neithan
Super review.
I specifically agree that the Butastur is particularly good with acoustic music.

Dsnuts

Headphoneus Supremus
Night Oblivian Butastur- The reference
Pros: -A solid, well designed all resin 10 BA IEM
-smaller medium in size
-innovative pressure ventilation
-3 sound bore design
-2 tuning switches for treble and bass
-balanced reference level tuning
-excellent detailed extended treble
-highly technical mids presentation
-accurate bass with good impact and extension
-well matching copper cable with modularity
-transparent of the sound chain connected to the Butastur
Cons: -transparent of the sound chain to the Butastur
-BA bass while some of the best in the industry can't rumble like a vented dynamic.
Night Oblivion Butastur
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The Butastur was a joint project between a well known friend to the community, American Spirit and an experienced Chinese IEM designer Jinny Tan of Night Oblivion. I first heard of the project from the man himself on the Discovery thread and unlike the myriads of reviewer sanctioned slightly tweaked tunings of the colab IEM the Night Oblivian Butastur seemed to be a well thought out well designed new IEM with a new brand name. I hope these guys continue to make more IEMs as the goal of this offering is to bring to the enthusiast the best you can buy for the money.
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Utilizing a total of 10 BAs per side. Stuffing 10 drivers in a single shell of an IEM seems daunting but what is even more challenging is not necessarily using so many drivers per side but more so keeping the size of the shells to a minimum for better longer term comfort. The Batastur is using 8 premium Knowles drivers and 2 Sonion drivers for its bass end with a very innovative air pressure balanced vent on the front of the nozzle. To be more specific. 2 Sonions for bass+ 2 Knowles mids-lows+ 4 Knowles mids-highs + 2 Knowles for ultra highs, 3 way crossover + 2 tuning switches. One for trebles and one for a very mild boost for lower mids-bass.
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The shell size is closer to a compact medium actually knocking on the doors of a smaller shelled IEM. Which is quite the feat considering just how many drivers it is using. The included accessories come with a 2 pin 6N 4 cores crystal copper litz cable with modular plugs. 3.5mm single ended, 2.5mm and 4.4mm balanced plugs. 3 sets of silicones and standard clam shell case.
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Butastur in size vs Tansio Mirai TSMR-10/ medium sized shell.

The Butastur from the beginning was designed for the purpose of being a reference tuned balanced IEM meaning it will be leaning more toward neutrality and accuracy with a balanced presentation vs being too colored in any one region or another for a flavored sound profile. It incorporates 2 tuning switches in the design, one that boosts the treble and another that adds a mild boost for lower mids to the bass end. Their Balanced armature drivers were all hand selected for their ability and sound performance given the particular regions of sound they are taxed with. A 3 tube nozzle design provides a nice natural separation of the 3 parts of the sound but then adds a 4th tube in the nozzle for a pressure balancing vent which effectively eliminates pressure build up that can happen when listening to your IEMs. This is important as nothing ruins an enjoyable sound experience like an uncomfortable pressure build up in the ears.
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The Butasturs sound profile incorporates well designed technical traits that are not as common at the price they are sold for but some may have some issues with their evenly balanced tuning. I have seen complaints of the Butastur not being so good for Rock and Metal for example which to be honest I don't hear them that way. I suppose if you're used to a traditional V shaped tuning which are more emphasized for guitars and drum impact with vocals not being as forward in the mix then yes I can see how a person can view the Butastur as not being so good for that genre of music. To be honest I don't hear it being terrible for rock and metal. I do know a lot of old rock and metal recordings are not that great in the first place. Could it be a case of the Butastur being more revealing of the source material? The Butastur is easy enough to drive but ultimately the Butastur will sound best with your best parts of the sound chain in effect as they are sensitive to sources, cables and tips. If you have a leaner sounding source the Butastur will sound lean and neutral. If you have a fuller sounding warm musical large and in charge sounding source that is how the Butastur will sound.
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Butastur out of my DX300Max is just the ticket for a full warm well imaged and detailed spacious sound experience.
Standard disclaimers. The Butastur was provided by Penon Audio for the purpose of a review. They have been used for the past month and has been tested with my sources IBasso DX300Max, Fiio M15, M15S, Fiio K9 Pro for amping and numerous cables. You can get yourself a Butastur here on penon web page.
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Its transparency is such that what you feed the Butastur will translate to exactly every part of the sound chain that is attached to the Butastur. So much so that the Butastur has quickly become a nice reference tool for all things sources and cables for me. I review cables and the occasional source so it is remarkable just how good the Butastur translates to how your sources and cables influence the Butasturs sound.

I will go over cable pair ups toward the end of the read but for now the sound of the Butastur is the very definition of a well balanced sound signature. You can even call this a good example of a reference type balanced tuning.
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Trebles of the Butastur are defined and refined with no overemphasized spikes to grind your well recorded tracks to a halt well at least with the treble switch down. Even with the treble switch on, yes there is an increase in treble presence but again I have heard plenty of IEMS that are tuned with spikes that cause trebles to sound a bit artificial. Overall the switch was done tastefully and it will not add too much to overly color the sound for the Butastur. The base treble tuning is just forward enough to give a good sense of presence and space for your trebles with a solid extension and details for trebles. Butastur being BA based does a remarkable job with micro details for treble notes including a sense of air. Clean, clear well defined treble notes appear and while higher end IEMs will have even better articulation for treble notes, the treble notes will not leave a person wanting. A complete fully realized treble note with the right amount of presence and sparkle. The treble does a remarkable job at a refined well established treble presentation. The tuning switch enhances the treble which will add more emphasis for a brighter timbre to the trebles, enhancing transparency. It's nice to have that option but my own personal taste for treble notes sounds more natural on the off potion. Trebles overall are satisfactory and being an all BA set the trebles makes an easy transition to the upper mids and mid notes of your given music. Coherency is an aspect the Butastur also excels at due to this factor.
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Butastur has a mild upper mid lift to give it enough prominence with both vocals and instruments alike. While the going rate for a lot of Chifi IEMs nowadays is to increase the upper mids for clarity and better presence, too much in this area also can infuse some artificialness of sound. Making some IEMs sound sterile or a bit too analytical. This is not an issue at all with the Butastur, I doubt anyone will complain that the Butastur has too much upper mid presence. It has a goldilocks amount of presence due to this aspect, something a lot of IEM manufacturers can learn from. It has a very similar tuning philosophy in common with Yanyin IEMs. Hence I will compare the Butastur with the Yanyin Moonlights toward the end of the review. Mids presence in relation to the trebles and bass is expertly balanced, which as a side effect will ultimately sound a bit mid focused and will sound like the treble and bass end is complimenting the mids tuning on the Butastur. Again similar tuning philosophy to how the Yanyin Moonlights and to a lesser extent the Yanyin Aladdin are tuned.

Mids of the Butastur has enough forwardness with very good technicalities for a proper mids performance. Anything considered reference needs proper mids and here the Butasturs strength comes in the form of some of the better mids for your cash. Its mids layering, sound separation and imaging that really sets the Butastur as having a higher level mids performance. A bit of a warning however. If you connect the Butastur to a thinner sounding source, you're going to get a thinner sounding Butastur. On a side note the included cable is decent for an included cable and has its function due to modularity and its copper cores which enhances musicality for the Butastur but by no means is it the best match up. For owners of the Butastur try your other cables, I am very certain you will be pleasantly surprised. Again more about this toward the end of the read.
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Some will judge the Butastur based on whatever source they own and use however it is highly recommended to try the Butastur on at least 3 different sources. I find it interesting that while the Butastur is rated at 30 Ohm sensitivity, it literally becomes the best or the worst of what your source sounds like. For example I can tell just how much richer the Fiio M15S sounds like in comparison to the more neutrally tuned original Fiio M15. I can listen to the same tracks and pick up on that richer tonal character going from one source to the other. I can feel the superior dynamic qualities from my DX300Max vs the other sources. This with an added better resolving cable you have something that not too many IEMs in the price range will get you. Nearly a TOTL level sound performance. I say nearly because it's not exactly there. For my own taste in IEM sound. I would prefer this tuning with a nice capable dynamic handling the low bass notes. But that is more nitpicking than anything.
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That saying good things in, equals better things out applies to the Butastur. If you know you have good dynamic and musical sounding sources with a decent collection of nicer cables. You will be good to go with the Butastur. I have seen reports of some users saying the mids sound thin to them. It can but again this will be more based upon what you connect the Butastur to more than any other aspect. On my end its neutral tonal character with just enough warmth to its lower mids brings out a very natural sound character that is more than addictive, it becomes near reference level. As with all things that sound nice. Try this and try that, this is one IEM you need to find synergy with your sound chain, otherwise you will make a statement like how it is not good for rock and metal only to find out once you upgrade your source and cable that it actually sounds darn good. Again I get why some of the fellas are saying this. If you're coming from a colored sounding prior IEM then this will apply more so. But for the rest of you that want more of an accurate sounding IEM, that is what the Butastur does best. I agree it might not be the absolute bees knees when it comes to rock and metal music but they certainly hold their own. It is with vocal, and instrumental music that the Butastur really shines. They are more suited to be an allrounder more so than being a specialist in any way.
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Bass of the Butastur is a strong point. Much like the rest of the sound signature. The Butastur has a natural impactful bass character that will surprise. Sonion vented acupass bass BAs were hand selected for their dynamic like sound quality and due to being an all BA set up. Bass integration is as fluid as it gets for the given design. I have a handful of IEMs in my possession that use the Sonion vented bass BAs and just about all of them do bass better than other types of BA bass when it comes to bass definition, its impact and extension. Once again using that word to describe the sound of the Butastur. Natural.

The advantage of BA bass is that it does not require air like dynamics do for its full impact and presence, hence the immediate speed of the bass end is ideal for speedy bass emphasis. However the disadvantage of BA bass is that it has some difficulty portraying a realistic organic sub bass rumble and texture. Hence the reason why a lot of hybrid IEMs use dynamics vs using BA bass drivers. So the inherent weakness for the Butastur is its sub bass rumble. Which sounds a touch softer and lacks a real woofer like texture when compared directly to a vented bass form a higher end dynamic.. However the impactful nature of the bass is not only ideal for the Butastur balancing but shows that the bass end was not an afterthought in its design. I can’t say that the Butastur is lacking in sub bass because it has some solid extension, it does however lack a realistic bass texture that only a good vented dynamic can provide. This being said, the bass end here is just as good as the other sets I have using similar drivers. Dunu SA6, Penon Legend, Penon Impacts, Penon Turbo, Tansio Mirai RGB ect. All these IEMs share very similar bass ability, some are more elevated in emphasis than others but overall bass impact, bass tonality, bass definition and extensions are solid, but all of them also share a similar lack of a real sub bass texture.
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It's not that the bass emphasis and ability is lacking here, it is just the limitation of the drivers that is being used. Bass is in the good category and in some ways more accurate to the recording of tracks due to its sheer speed. Butasturs bass is tuned nicely to get the full deal out of these drivers but again bass lacks the one aspect BA drivers just can’t do and that is texture. This being said, even if the Busatur was using a dynamic driver, due to its tuning angle being more of a balanced tuning. Bass will not have the extreme texture of bass driven sets simply due to the lack of emphasis. Hence what's being used on the Butastur is very adequate, natural and fluid for the tuning altogether.

Bass is satisfactory with accurate tonal characters but given its design, there is a bit of a trade off. If a dynamic was used for bass, you're not going to get the same type of speed and coherence in an all BA design. Dynamic bass is usually slower and will have a different transient response with a slower decay than BA bass. Then you would also have to incorporate a larger housing to fit the dynamic going from a smaller medium to an actual medium or even a large in size due to the dynamic implementation. Everything on the Busatur was designed with the single goal to bring out a reference level of sound for the bucks and for the most part these guys did an wonderful job creating a well tuned, natural tonal balanced set, a splash of musicality, a touch of natural warmth with a higher degree of technicalities; imaging, layering, good timbre, all presented in a spacious moderate sized stage and depth and you get the Butastur.
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In the end
The design and end results of its compact efficient design was a success. The one aspect of the Butastur I appreciate is that it is so transparent of what it is attached to that it has easily become one of my go to IEMs for testing sound sources and cables. I have IEMs that cost exponentially more that I can’t use them in this manner and this clearly shows how well the Butastur was designed. It's all BA design has to be one of the best in the price range. I own a former Empire Ear flagship Zeus which uses 14BAs, the reason why I bring this particular IEM up is that the Butastur is the IEM that the Zeus so much wanted to be but at a much cheaper price. Folks that have owned the Zeus in the past will understand if they ever get a hold of the Butastur. Butastur fixes the issues that I personally had with the Zeus. Both these sets are tuned to be neutral balanced reference however the Zeus has a bit much in its treble region with a treble spike in the sensitive 7-8 Khz region. Is overly sensitive and its bass end has a lot to be desired. Lacks in both impact and its sub bass extension and rumble is nonexistent. Here is a case where more drivers don’t get you more or better sound. The only aspect of the Zeus that betters the Butastur is its stage. Zeus clearly is playing with the big boys when it comes to stage but tuning wise. I would take the Butastur 9/10 times.
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Butastur shares in common with Yanyin house tungings. If you own a Yanyin aladdin and or moonlights you will understand why I state this.

In comparison both the Aladdin and the Moonlights are balanced very similarly for all parts of their sound signature much like the Butastur. Where does the Butastur sit between these IEMs? I would say if you added a dynamic to do the bass end of the Butastur. You would get something similar to how the Moonlight performs more so than the Aladdin. Aladdin for the bucks is a fantastic set but lacks a bit of dynamism and its technicalities are about average for hybrids in the upper budget realm for IEMs.

The Moonlight is the Aladdin with much better everything and hence is more closer to Yanyins flagship IEM level vs the intro hybrid IEM the Aladdin. The Moonlights has a richer tonal quality and its mids are pushed just a bit more forward in the mix vs the Busatur. Trebles get a bit more in the way of micro details for the Moonlights otherwise both sets will trade punches when it comes to imaging, stage and detail. Even though Moonlights use a bio dynamic for its bass its emphasis is at a very similar level to the Butasturs bass but due to its outstanding bio dynamic it is using, it has a solid low reaching rumble for sub bass that brings a natural bass character for the Moonlights.

This being said, I would actually like to see a revised Busatur with a potent dynamic in it for bass and maybe adding two ESTs for its upper trebles with a similar balanced tuning. I know this would add more to the cost of a revised Butastur but I bet it will make the Butastur that much more higher end vs how they sound now. Considering the Butastur here actually cost less vs the Moonlight I would actually put the Butastur in a similar playing level SQ wise to that of the Moonlights more so than the Aladdin.

Cable matchups.
Included copper cable is a good included cable and I can tell it is a true higher end crystal copper rated at 6N cable. A good resolving copper cable was selected to bring the best tonal character and a touch of warmth to the Butastur sound profile. I agree with what was selected here but you can shape the Butastur to how you feel sounds right on the Butastur by doing a bit of cable swapping.
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Penon Obsidian@$149
Obsidian is 4 cored copper cable that is similar in makeup to the stock cable of the Butastur. If you are happy with the stock sound performance of the Butastur but would like a bit more density for its sound with greater note weight. That is what the Obsidian will do. It does not enhance the stage like the other cables I will mention here but I figure I would start with this cable as this cable is a much better version of the stock cable that comes with the Butastur. Also introduces a touch of gold plating for a few of its cores. Which adds a touch more richer flavoring for the Butasturs tonal qualities. Bass to vocals to treble everything gets an uptick in weight with this cable. Folks that love the musical qualities of the Butatur but want an upgrade on that musicality. The Obsidian is the cable to go with. Its 3 in 1 modular system is identical to the stock Butatur cable as well.
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Penon Vocal @ $69.
Ok so these cables are a specialty cable with 4 cores made of silver plated gold foil over crystal copper. If you take a premium to the Butasturs vocal and instrumental clarity and detail. These cables will help in that department as not only does it slightly enhance the stage perception of the Butastur but also makes an impact on imaging and sound separation, especially noticed for the mids. These cables are an excellent match up for several reasons, I know the color may be a bit out there for some but heck if you are going for bang for bucks in cable land that will make a difference for the Butasturs technical ability. These cables enhance the Butaturs technical ability, especially noticed for vocal and instrumental timbre. Out of the 3 cables connected to the Butastur these are the best value as they easily make a difference like the other two but at half the price of the other two cables. Better clarity, better sound separation and imaging as a result when compared to the stock cable. Yes these are indeed an upgrade for the Butatur.
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New Penon ASOS@ 169
This is an immediate upgrade for the Butastur. Folks that feel Butastur could use a touch more note weight with a natural expansion in its stage. The ASOS is just the ticket for this effect. ASOS is a more transparent cable using a lot of higher end copper with a good dose of silver plating. I feel these bring out a more expansive and better detailed Butastur. These cables are new to the market but has quickly become a favorite of mine to use on the Butastur. If you are looking for a clear upgrade for the Butatur for all the reasons mentioned above on the other two cable with a natural expansion of stage and depth This cable is clearly the upgrade on The ASOS. It has a magnifying effect for the Butastur sound. Every aspect of its sound is enhanced for the better and if you connect the Butastur with this cable to a richer sounding source like Fiios M15s or the IBasso DX300Max. You will get the absolute best of what the Butastur can do.
Fuller bigger body of note. More immersive, better technicalities with a bigger expansion of stage.
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Neithan
Neithan
Amazing review!
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nihalsharma

500+ Head-Fier
Butastur: A Mid-Fi Champion That Exceeds Expectations
Pros: Great likeable tuning - fun and enjoyable
Nice BA bass (strong and enjoyable)
Decent cable quality
Small shells give a very comfortable fit
Cons: May sound thinner on some low level setup
Not much given the price of the IEMs
Introduction:

We audiophiles are always on the lookout for the next hidden gem, and one such discovery is Night Oblivion Butastur. It's an all-BA driver IEM with 10 drivers on each side. It is available on PenonAudio.

Link: https://penonaudio.com/Night-Oblivion-Butastur

I got to demo it through a friend. There were a lot of words and praises about it on the Head-Fi thread. When a product surpasses your expectations, it's a moment of delight for any of us in the hobby. I must say this is a brilliant IEM, and I did not expect it to be so good. Well, for the price tag, they are a steal. To assess the capabilities of the Butastur IEM, I tried it on a variety of sources, including the Lotoo Paw Gold Touch, Aroma A100TB, Earmen Angel, and Shanling M7. Please be mindful of the fact that Butastur needs good (resolving and powerful) sources to shine, as it may sound thinner and unexciting on not-so-good-and-resolving sources.

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Impressions:

Comfortable Fit:

One of the first things that struck me was the comfort of the Butastur IEMs. Their small and lightweight shells make for a comfortable listening experience, even during extended sessions. There are too many multi-drivers these days that are too big to fit in ears sometimes. It's good to see the maker has packed so many drivers in a small shell.

Cable and Tips:
The included cable met our expectations, and when paired with SpinFit W1 tips, it complemented the IEMs perfectly. The Azla Sedna Light tips really fit very well on it, better than Spinfit w1 and H570 eartips(which the @AmericanSpirit_JP has suggested). H570 is a bit wide for my ear canal. Just for the sake of it, I changed the cable on it to the cable that comes with Kublai Khan, which is just decent, nothing great. I am sure there is a slightly better dynamic—not much, but surely it’s there. I don’t have a better cable than this, so I can’t say much.

Tuning Switches:
One thing that stands out and shouts in your head when you put these IEMs in your ears is their great tuning. Tuning can really put you off or get you excited. There are so many good IEMs that fail to impress eventually due to their poor (slightly off) tuning. Butastur is amazingly tuned. On top of that, it comes with multiple tuning options, and I find the 1-0 tuning (bass up and treble down) to be my preferred choice. I don't feel the need to adjust the default treble; it sounded just right.

Impressive Bass:
For an all-balanced armature (BA) IEMs, the bass performance is just outstanding. It's well controlled, clean, fast, snappy, and surprisingly, I don't miss the dynamic driver (DD) bass on these IEMs. DD bas has definitely an edge if done perfectly right, but Butastur's bass is too good for all BA IEMs. With the right tips and proper fit, the bass feels really tight, and it slams really well. No complaints at all.

Sweet Mids and Decent Staging:
The midrange on the Butastur IEMs is sweet and well-balanced. Vocals are such a charm on these IEMs—emotional and engaging. The staging and imaging are both very decent, and what's most notable is the seamless cohesion among different frequencies. There's no sense of frequencies stepping on each other; they each have their space to shine. Contrary to concerns about thin sound, the Butastur IEMs, especially when paired with high-end setups like the Lotoo Paw Gold Touch and Aroma amp, produce notes with enough weight and body. This results in a rich and immersive audio experience.

Conclusion:

Tuning is the real secret sauce.

In my time with the Butastur, it became clear that this product is not just another IEM packed with a high number of drivers. It's a testament to the importance of good tuning. If an IEM is well tuned, it can sound really amazing. Butastur elevates your audio experience by providing superb resolution and preserving the authentic timbre of the music. These IEMS have been designed to impress, to break the myth that only kilobuck and flaships can sound good (still not a kilobuck killer). Butastur truly shines when paired with high-quality sources, such as the Lotoo Paw Gold Touch and Aroma amp. They deliver performance that exceeds their price range, making them a Mid-Fi King in their own right. It has pretty much everything you look for in a great IEM. It If you're in search of IEMs that offer exceptional value for money, the Butastur IEMs are undoubtedly worth considering. Quite an achievement for an IEM priced at 500–600 USD.

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Is it a Kilobuck Killer?

I would say no. Let's not put such a label on these categories of IEMs. They have been built for users to enjoy and make listening fun, because the tuning says so. They are likeable from the first time you put them on. But they certainly lack the technicalities and microdynamics that some kilobuck iems have. Butastur may be more fun-sounding than some of the IEMs priced 2-3 times higher, but when compared to the good ones, there may be a few things missing. But should you care when the price is so low? I think I go by this attitude. For some fun sessions, I would certainly spend some time with the Butastur and give these iems the love they deserve.

Jaytiss

500+ Head-Fier
A Solid Choice.
Pros: Excellent technicality
Base is fun and rich
Cable is impressive at the price range.
Lush Highs and Great Space
Cons: Poor stock tip selection
Packaging is very Utalitarion and could be improved.
Timbre is a bit of and sounds unnatural
Tone isn't what I want in an iem, but it's fine.
Price makes this not worth it for many, or too much of a stretch.
Fit is mediocre at best.
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First off, I bought this iem with my own money from Penon Audio https://penonaudio.com/Night-Oblivion-Butastur.html. (non aff link)
This is an iem that has been on my radar for a while. American Spirit is one of the nicest people I’ve encountered in the Hobby. I got mine in the second wave partially due to rave reviews of people that I trust. (HBB and Akron) I like their philosophy of Price of Med-fi performance of TOTL. I feel the hobby is a beautiful thing, but it is a challenge as there are so many expensive iems. It’s hard to find value in anything extremely expensive but I feel 600 dollars is a sweet point where it is expensive but not too bad.
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I made the decision to sell my Dunu SA6 MK2 as while I love it, I have found that you need to get things that you enjoy and use instead. After my most expensive iem was sold (well technically the Meteor is 20 dollars more) I decided to try a new flavor of iems. I’m very excited to review this iem. While the Dunu was a strong experience, I favored the Aful 8 over them and was looking for something new, and didn’t see what the Dunu had to offer as something different in my collection, as the fit was a bit large, the upper mids weren't fun. I thought that the Butastur was going to be very expensive and am very happy with it’s price and thought that I'd take it.

I am going to share a larger list that I have of songs that I like in this review. 61+ songs Here
This list is my go to test songs for the first go.
Top 10 Tidal list here:

Bass

The details of the base is strong and everything sounds right on it. The base seems well-controlled and fun. I don’t find it partially lean but it does feel a tiny bit light. I have found that while it doesn’t match my target amount of base, I do fully enjoy it. I feel percussions on it sound great. My Monarch MK 3 just came in a few days ago and I've been listening to the base on the Butasur, While not as impactful, it is very good and doesn't disappoint. It just isn't earthshaking or rattling. Just good or within 98% of the much more expensive Monarch.


Midrange

It has smooth treble and good detail. Voices sound right, podcasts sound right, and voices sound supported with the base also being present. I don’t find it shouty at all but fun, smoothe and enjoyable. Podcasts and voices all sound great on it, and it has a good feel to it. Overall this iem is fresh, non fatiguing and just an easy clear listen. Vocals sound detailed and lifelike. The resolution is life-like, and it’s almost daunting compared to my average speakers and car audio setup!


Treble

The treble is a good part of this set and this iem has great detail and sparkle for me. No issues here. I’m able to game, listen to music, and a podcast all at once with this iem. It has incredible details that come across in the treble. Details shine, and the music is extremely enjoyable and lush. Very happening set.

Gaming-
This iem is fantastic for gaming and movies. Great detail and space, I really feel like I'm in a room with speakers and vocals sound amazing.

Shell -
The shell is pretty amazing as it has a unique look of the claw of a hawk. It has a beautiful shell that is black, but with some purpose. I love black audio products, and this doesn’t disappoint. I was worried as others have had issues with their shells (Pennon was good about sending a new unit), and I'm very happy. It has a great fit with a medium sized shell.
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Case- This case is pretty nice, but nothing special. It does it’s job and functions, but I prefere something different personally. But it is a fine case that fits the iem and the stock cable well, but not much else.

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Cable: This cable has three selections of 2.5, 3.5, and 4.4 connections. It’s hard to complain about. Personally I can’t stand the 4.4 only connections and am part of the 3.5 mm gang, so a 3 in 1 is perfect for me.


Tip Selection - I wasn't overly impressed with the tip selection, but I find myself tip-sensitive. I am ordered the favored pairs from Alli express H570 and the recommended cable and might update the review later depending on that.


Quick-Fire Comparisons

NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR VS. Symphonium Meteor
Overall Tuning: NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR
Details: NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR

NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR VS. Dunu SA6 MK2
Overall Tuning: NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR
Details: NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR

NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR VS. Thieaudio Oracle MK 2
Overall Tuning: NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR
Details: NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR

NIGHT OBLIVION BUTASTUR VS. Thieaudio Monarch MK 3
Overall Tuning: Tied
Details: Thieaudio Monarch MK 3

Graph:

Very nice graph, I go with the Red UD configuration and it's very nice.

MVGMnRF6seqpu7hzNOGv5RJfO9q-LuX4sOBHFuYlg94xt2w1q9fOExQmQb47WYCz-KGIB93U-r68FBE5yjAQmT1jDGgedIDbZDNG6HP5NNdPPOo4AJVVZOPrGqJXlEWUmoshaikYDe1YtdDYBxdg504




Sound - Final Impressions

Some iems take time to get used to or are good on some tracks and not others. This is not the case with this iem. It has nice base, fantastic treble, and really has a great sound for the price. I'm super impressed with it and give it an easy recommendation.

Recommended EQ: I’ve been messing around with Peace APO as I further level up my audio game. I’ve been enjoying my time with it. I will often times recommend EQ, for this one I will not but I do keep the first dip swith up for a little more base. I do find many iems lean, and find that base is needed. This iem is almost exactly to my preference, and I'm really impressed by it.

Gifting/who is it for: I think this is a nice hifi iem to gift to someone. But the packaging is meant to be a sonic treat, not a gifting item. I personally find an iem like the Kinera Celests Phoenixcall a great gifting iem due to it's lower price. This is the kind of iem you keep because of its cool look. So its Gifting possibility isn't great. This is a keeper iem, not a gifter. This is for those who want a special experience with well-done technicals and treble for a great price.


Pairing: I used a Quidelix 5k for mobile, my dongle dac iBasso DC04 for my laptop, and my JDS labs Element III MK2 Boosted for my Desktop PC. The iem is easy to drive and a delight on everything that I tried it on.

Summary-

I'm a huge fan of this iem. I haven't had great experiences with most collabs I've tried as of late and am hesitant to try one and recommend it. While I know of American Spirit and have talked to him once or twice via pm's I don't consider him a personal friend but a likable person in the hobby that I only know of but respect. This iem is very excellent. How excellent... I can't say. But it holds its own with anything at it's price. And is just overall resolute and pristine. I'm in love, but in shock at the price and the sound quality.
Be scared at when some minor changes come to packaging and American Spirit gets his second iem, as I feel this is just a banger and is a huge success for the price.
I'm giving this an S for technicals and S for Tuning. While not perfect, even after 20 hours of listening and tip swapping, I am just in awe at the product. I'm sated and happy. A new standard has been set.
I wanted to finish this review and might be updating it when the recomended tips, cables come in. If any questions or comparisons please ask.
Thanks for reading. Any feedback is welcome.
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Jaytiss
Jaytiss
While I don't want to comment on drama that I can't confirm, I will update that I have sold my set. I did enjoy my time with it, but I think for the price it is a bit much to ask. I think something like the Blessing 3, or Chopping would be a better value to you. @Chemistara
D
drumtones
its not drama, & it has been confirmed/ admitted by American Spirit.
asfaras the big picture; it is still a quality set + as I didn't pay import tax, the price was just about agreeable.
T
TsukiGermany
How is the nozzle size? Looks very big in the pictures. Could you compare it to nozzles of other IEMs you own/tried? Thanks :)
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