Artti T10 and Sivga M300 use 1x Planar (14mm Single Coil, Dual Magnet) and 1DD (15.4mm) driver setups respectively. Artti T10 costs $75 while Sivga M300 costs $65. Artti T10 is $10 more expensive. Artti T10 holds a slight 0.4-point edge in reviewer scores (7 vs 6.6).
Insights
| Metric | Artti T10 | Sivga M300 |
|---|---|---|
| Bass | 7 | 6.1 |
| Mids | 7 | 6.8 |
| Treble | 7 | 6.7 |
| Details | 7 | 6.5 |
| Soundstage | 7 | 7.1 |
| Imaging | 7 | 6.4 |
| Dynamics | 7 | 6.2 |
| Tonality | 7 | 6.8 |
| Technicalities | 7 | 6.5 |
Artti T10 Aggregated Review Score
Average Reviewer Scores
Average Reviewer Score:
7Generally Favorable
Sivga M300 Aggregated Review Score
Average Reviewer Scores
Average Reviewer Score:
6.6Cautiously Favorable
Reviews Comparison
Artti T10 (more reviews)
Artti T10 reviewed by Audio Amigo
Youtube Video Summary
Artti T10 hits the budget planar brief with a thoughtful package: a sturdy hard carry case, six pairs of tips (S/M/L in both standard and wide-bore), and a supple 4-wire cable offered in 3.5mm or 4.4mm. The cable behaves well, but the chin slider is frustratingly stiff. Build is reassuring—polycarbonate shells with a UV treatment, metal mesh at the nozzle, and sensible venting—while remaining exceptionally light. It asks for a bit more juice than a phone; a small dongle DAC is recommended. Comfort is solid for average ears, though the “tiny ears test” fails as jaw movement can break seal. Styling leans retro hearing-aid; the “Council of Ladies” gave it a unanimous thumbs-down.
Tonally, this is a mild V-shape with excellent sub-bass extension and punch, speedy planar bass that stays clean, and mids that are accurate with a hint of female-vocal forwardness. Treble is clean, smooth, and non-fatiguing, walking the harmonics tightrope without glare. Technicals impress across the range: clear microdetail, crisp transients, confident separation, and a stage that places instruments naturally with good stereo imaging. It handles electronic bass drops, rock kick drums, complex vocals, and fast acoustic picking with equal ease—planar speed without the usual edge.
Against peers, T10 reads like a slightly more relaxed Letshuoer S12 at a fraction of the cost; brighter and more energetic than Letshuoer S08 and Hidizs MP145, and more lively than the more neutral NiceHCK F1 Pro. It’s a clear step up from the budget Luna, especially when found on sale. Accessory parity is strong, ceding only to sets with modular cables (S08/S12 Pro). Verdict: at $75 MSRP this earns “This is brilliant” on the Audio Amigo scale, with a standing upgrade to “You should buy this” if available around $50. A top-tier value pick for anyone wanting a mature, engaging planar—so long as small-ear fit and the looks aren’t deal-breakers.
Audio Amigo Youtube Channel
Artti T10 reviewed by Z-Reviews
Youtube Video Summary
The Artti T10 is a 14.2 mm planar dressed in an unapologetically industrial shell—textured, raw, almost “1980s test-gear” chic. In the box: case and a solid cable with a 3.5 mm or 4.4 mm choice at checkout (no modular tips to swap later). The shocker is the price: $69 with a 15% coupon, a package that feels like it should sit closer to the $200–$250 crowd. One big knock: a paper insert from the retailer pushing incentivized 5-star posts for $10—hard pass on that practice. Aesthetics aside, the overall presentation screams “budget done right” without pretending to be luxury.
Sonically, this set hits like a grown-up S12: wide staging, crisp detail, and a sweet, forward treble that stays exciting without turning glassy. Bass comes in clean and controlled, vocals land with satisfying color, and the tuning keeps tracks engaging across genres—laid-back when the mix calls for it, energetic when it gets heavy. It scales with source (surprisingly happy on tubes like WA7), and tip-rolling pays off—deep-seal options (Render, Dunu SS, XELASTEC-style) add presence and grip. Under $100, it’s easily a top-five contender on sonics alone. Final word: 9/10 for sound; would edge closer to perfect with a modular plug system and a better tip spread, but as a wide, detailed, insanely good-value planar, the T10 absolutely delivers.
Z-Reviews Youtube Channel
Sivga M300 (more reviews)
Sivga M300 reviewed by Paul Wasabii
Youtube Video Summary
The M300 is a flathead earbud in ebony wood shells with a 15.4 mm dynamic driver; in hand it feels solid and well finished. Tuning leans neutral with a flatter low end that supports the lower mids, lifts vocal energy modestly, and carries into an airy treble with good extension, yielding a natural sense of stage. The presentation emphasizes clarity and openness rather than warmth or heavy slam.
Bass focuses on mid-bass texture and impact more than sub-bass rumble, with some roll-off; turning volume up or pairing with a warmer source/EQ adds body if desired. Mids come forward cleanly with balanced male and female vocals, while the upper range stays extended without sounding peaky, contributing to stage height and resolving power. A light lift to sub-bass can yield a fuller balance without masking the well-extended top end, but even stock the M300 delivers a tasteful, open and controlled listen for an earbud form factor.
Paul Wasabii Youtube Channel
Sivga M300 reviewed by Web Search
Although often grouped with IEMs in shops, the Sivga M300 is a flat-head earbud with an open fit. It combines CNC-machined aluminum and African ebony housings around a 15.4 mm dynamic driver (graphene-coated diaphragm). .
Key specs include 64 Ω impedance, 109 dB sensitivity, a rated 20 Hz–40 kHz response, and a fixed silver-plated OFC cable; weight is listed at 29 g. Street pricing sits around $64.90, placing it firmly in the budget segment. .
On performance, product descriptions and early impressions point to a warm-balanced tilt with punchy bass, clear vocals, and a notably wide, airy stage for the price—consistent with the open earbud form factor (with limited isolation and bass depth depending on foams/fit). An independent write-up also highlights build quality, comfort, and surprisingly cohesive sound at this price point.
Artti T10 Details
Driver Configuration: 1x Planar (14mm Single Coil, Dual Magnet)
Tuning Type: V-Shaped
Price (Msrp): $75
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Sivga M300 Details
Driver Configuration: 1DD (15.4mm)
Tuning Type: Warm-balanced
Price (Msrp): $64.90
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Artti T10 User Review Score
Average User Scores
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Sivga M300 User Review Score
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Artti T10 Gaming Score
Gaming Score & Grade
- The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.
Gaming Score
7Gaming Grade
A-Sivga M300 Gaming Score
Gaming Score & Grade
- The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.
Gaming Score
6.5Gaming Grade
B+Artti T10 Scorings
Sivga M300 Scorings
Average Technical & Tuning Grades
Average Tunign Grade
B+- Expect a friendly tonal balance that could use polish but remains inviting. Great for casual listening, less so for purists.
Average Technical Grade
B+- The presentation is steady if unspectacular, holding onto essential details when the music stays simple. Fine details occasionally slip through the cracks.
Artti T10 User Reviews
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