I'm happily semi-retired when it comes to IEMs, but still genuinely curious about two things. 1. Fugaku, and 2. The emergence of new brands whose first offering is already priced 3k and above. Like what gives?
So I attended an audio show nearby after missing out on Canjam Singapore 2025. This is my ultra-fast impressions of notable IEMs during Day 1 of NIAVS (Northern International Audio-visual Show) 2025. It's a far cry from Canjam, but not too shabby either. Opinions are mine alone, don't buy just because I like something, don't bash just because I hated it. Different strokes for different folks. My preferred sound signature is neutral-warm with expansive soundstage. My fave IEM is Traillii.
Test gear:
-AK3000
-Oriolus Traillii for brief comparisons and as a "palette cleanser".
Huge disclaimer:
This year's NIAVS had truly horrible soundproofing. Everything is held in a big hall with tiny walled booths, so it's always noisy. As such, I cannot comment on noise floor, and most IEMs are tested louder than my usual listening volume.
Held in Setia Spice Convention Hall in Penang, Malaysia from 25-27/4/25.
More a hifi event with a sprinkling of headfi.
Heard the best of the best first. Brise Audio Fugaku, the USD17k system.
Holy crap this thing punches so hard. Dynamics especially in the bass are off the charts. The stage and scale is like listening to open back phones. Vast and wide and great amounts of spatial detail. The best thing about this is the realism. It recreates the feeling of being there live. Timbre is spot on, vocals are realistic and lifelike. Bass is the highlight for me bcos of the way it hits so intense and visceral you can feel it. Mids are expectedly good, and the treble is nicely extended.
You can't really say it's overtly technical, because the details are not pushed forward and presented, but the extension both ends must be godlike bcos there's tons of air and detail despite the lush notes. I would rather say this in reverse. Every minute detail is surely there, presented entirely and honestly by the Fugaku. The onus is on the listener as to how much detail we can actually extract and listen to. Cliche but... I'm hearing things I haven't before.
Compared to Traillii, Traillii sounds a bit more closed in and compact spatially. Tuning, timbre and vocals are still as good as can be, and really that's the only thing they can touch Fugaku with.
But the bass loses out big time. Even when cheating with higher volume, the impact and vibration is just going towards the head a bit. Fugaku goes right for the throat and upper chest.
After the first few strums of Hotel California I was ready to dismiss Fugaku as overhyped. Then crap, the bass hit and I'm converted. Truly the best IEM I've ever heard and a religious experience. I stopped after an hour because listening to Fugaku any longer will spoil the enjoyment of my own collection lol.
Nostalgia Audio Camelot. USD3K. 2DD 4BA 4EST.
Has a generic TOTL tuning. Good bass, nice detailed treble, natural mids, wide stage. Tuning a bit too smoothed out and lacking in dynamics. Pleasant and safe tuning, a good all-rounder. But lacking a true identity to stand out on its own, something that's needed at this price bracket.
Nostalgia Audio Durandal. USD2.5K. 1DD 4BA 2BC.
Love the shell design and cable. Midcentric, vocal-focused IEM. Beautifully-rendered instruments and vocals that are pushed forward. Has less bass but clearer mids and treble compared to Camelot. Dynamics are better too, but small stage.
Both lose out to Traillii in terms of stage size, imaging, speed and detail, and of course dynamics.
Hercules Audio Moses. USD4k. 1DD 4BA 4EST.
Holy crap this is a show highlight. Big bold bass with awesome punch and decay. Texturing and balance is excellent. Mids are neutral and airy. Treble is smooth and a bit conservative. Big stage and dynamics. Bass detail and dynamics are highlights. Very very fun sig. Neutral-warm with boosted bass. Bloody visceral.
Traillii is airier, thinner, sharper, more detailed with gentler bass. Stage size similar. Moses better bass impact and dynamics, Traillii better technicals overall, more attention grabbing. Both complement each other well.
Ice labs Spectrumica. USD2k. Quadbrid 1DD 1BC 4BA 2EST.
Thought I should try something priced slightly below the mega-expensive heavyweights. Incredibly detailed and dynamic, but incoherent leh. Warm smooth vocals contrast too much with grainy hyperdetailed treble. Couldn't get into the music. But for detail-heads, do take a look at this.
Aful Cantor. USD1k. 14BA.
Fantastic detail and texture. Good dynamics and air. Bass is deep and impactful. Stage is so-so. Dealbreaker is the mids and treble lean bright and edgy, I'm can't relax with this tuning.
AME Mousa. USD4.5k. 13BA 2BC.
Thick, warm, lush, full, repeat. This is Mousa. Bass is full and impactful, mids are thick and layered, treble is detailed with no harshness. Problem is stage, just enough width and depth to prevent from being drowned in sound, but nothing much outside the head, quite closed in. Also just enough dynamics to keep the sig from being sludgy. Excellent and utterly immersive tuning but so-so technicalities. Very kaw (concentrated)... Like early day Elysian. For fans of thicc notes and warm tuning.
Unique Melody Soleil Tombe. USD8k. 12BA 1BC.
Yet another IEM I wanted to dismiss in a hurry, this actually surprised me. Endgame-tier mids tuning with just the right amount of warmth, lushness, detail and euphony. Vocals and acoustics have amazing texture. The bass hits incisively deep and the treble is smooth and highly extended, but the star of the show is the utterly addictive mids. Also, Soleil Tombe's unique presentation deserves mention. Stage is narrow but compensated by tremendous height and depth, so layering and imaging is in a class of its own. I love hearing how Soleil interprets different tracks. But is it worth USD8k? Nope!
Canpur CP622B. USD4k, 6BA 2EST 2BC.
The disappointment of the day. Sounds like your generic TOTL all-rounder. Does everything alright, but does nothing to stand out on its own. I call this the vanilla TOTL tuning. Good but too safe. I want some character in my IEMs!
Jomo Nautilus. USD800. 1DD 1 Planar 2BC.
Excellent bass implementation. Punchy and full subbass, nice balance between sub and midbass. Very good air, layering and dynamics as well. Too bad the mids and treble are too energetic. Otherwise it competes with higher priced IEMs.
Jomo Serenity. USD1600. 2DD 2 planar 4BA, open back IEM.
Of course stage size is big and airy. The bass is just as delicious as Nautilus, impactful and layered with beautiful DD decay. The treble is clear and abundantly detailed, with just a bit of glare. The mids are safely tuned, have good timbre but slightly recessed. Not bad but I wouldn't buy.
UE Live. 6BA 2DD.
Just curious about this pioneer brand that took a back seat in the IEM world nowadays. What a dud. Dark. Treble shy. Warm and smooth but no dynamics. Soft treble. Sludge. No thanks.
UE Premier. 21BA.
More of the same. Sludge with better treble. Not that I don't like the tuning, just that the lack of air and dynamics in today's day and age is kinda disturbing. They don't listen to their competitors?
Mr Rob Watts of Chord.
Mr Joseph Mou of Jomo Audio.
Show favourites:
1. Brise Audio Fugaku
2. Hercules Audio Moses
3. UM Soleil Tombe
Great write-up, thanks for the insights! Interesting that you perceived Spectrumica as treble energy heavy and technical. I found the tuning very coherant and smooth, with high sub and mid bass emphasis. If I would "fix" anything about it, I would ask for a tiny bit more treble extension and air with the stock cable and sligthly more technicalities. Other than that, somewhat of a perfect warm-fi iem to my ear right now.
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