Thieaudio Hype 4 and Dunu DK-3001 BD use 2DD+4BA and 1DD+4BA+4P driver setups respectively. Thieaudio Hype 4 costs $400 while Dunu DK-3001 BD costs $500. Dunu DK-3001 BD is $100 more expensive. Both score 7.4 from reviewers. Thieaudio Hype 4 carries a user score of 8. Thieaudio Hype 4 has better mids with a 0.6-point edge, Dunu DK-3001 BD has slightly better dynamics with a 0.3-point edge, Dunu DK-3001 BD has significantly better soundstage with a 1-point edge and Thieaudio Hype 4 has significantly better imaging with a 1-point edge.
Insights
Metric | Thieaudio Hype 4 | Dunu DK-3001 BD |
---|---|---|
Bass | 7.2 | 7 |
Mids | 7.6 | 7 |
Treble | 7 | 7 |
Details | 7 | 7 |
Soundstage | 7 | 8 |
Imaging | 7 | 6 |
Dynamics | 6.3 | 6.5 |
Tonality | 7.4 | 6.7 |
Technicalities | 7.1 | 7.8 |
Thieaudio Hype 4 Aggregated Review Score
Average Reviewer Scores
Average Reviewer Score:
7.4Generally Favorable
Dunu DK-3001 BD Aggregated Review Score
Average Reviewer Scores
Average Reviewer Score:
7.4Generally Favorable
Reviews Comparison
Thieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Super* Review
The Thieaudio Hype 4 brings a hybrid setup of 2DD + 4BA at around $400, wrapped in a distinctive all-white shell with tidy faceplate patterning and a slightly tinted cable. Shell size is medium and the ergonomics echo other modern Thieaudio designs: easy insertion, stable fit, and genuine all-day comfort. Build quality and finish feel a notch more refined than usual for the brand, making the whole package look and wear better than expected at this price.
Tonality targets a neutral with bass boost profile, with emphasis kept largely to the sub-bass so things don’t turn warm or boomy. Versus Hype 2, there’s a touch more mid-bass and, more importantly, a firmer bass attack—swapping the softer, pillowy edges for punch and control. Treble stays smooth and well-controlled without sibilance. The star, though, is the imaging and head-stage: unusually wide and clean at this price, giving precise placement and clear separation that pops immediately on first listen.
Not everything is perfect—midrange micro-contrast can feel a bit “glassy,” so ultra-fine vocal texture and analog grit aren’t its specialty. In lateral comparisons, Yanyin Canon 2 plays warmer and fuller with slightly better textural nuance, while Hype 4 sounds cleaner, airier, and more expansive for live and electronic material. With meaningful improvements over Hype 2 (especially in bass behavior) and standout staging, Hype 4 earns a confident 4/5 as a polished, engaging all-rounder.
Super* Review original ranking
Super* Review Youtube ChannelDunu DK-3001 BD reviewed by Super* Review
The Dunu DK-3001 BD “Brain Dance” hits the $500 bracket with a bold cyberpunk-inspired design, metal shells, and a killer cable featuring a swappable 3.5/4.4 plug. Inside is a tribrid array—1DD + 4BA + 4 micro-planars—and the accessory loadout is generous: multiple silicone sets (including S&S) plus foam tips, adapters, pouch, microfiber, the works. Ergonomics are decent but not petite; the shells are a bit bulbous, and a longer tip style can help the fit. The case looks premium yet feels oversized for everyday carry.
On the graph and in the ear, tuning lands at clean-neutral with sub-bass lift: elevated low end focused on sub-bass, a slightly dipped lower midrange for clarity, and an energetic lower-treble/Presence region. The magic is in the execution—this thing rocks. Stage feels wide, separation is laser-cut, transients have crisp bite yet the treble remains smooth for the amount of sparkle on tap. Bass is taut and delineated with a satisfying bounce and real depth, prioritizing texture over mid-bass thump. At very low volumes some of the technical wow factor softens and the tone can lean a touch thin/bright, but at normal listening levels the presentation is downright addictive.
Versus Hisenior’s Mega5EST, the Brain Dance trades the Mega’s rich, mid-forward warmth for greater imaging width, cleaner bass definition, and higher overall engagement. Against the Moondrop x Crinacle Dusk, bass quantity is similar, but Dusk feels more physical and mid-centric while the BD sounds airier, wider, and a bit spicier up top—yet paradoxically smoother in treble timbre. Dusk remains the safer all-rounder and cheaper pick; the Brain Dance is the thrill ride. Verdict: a 5/5 set—one of the year’s standouts for those who want big technicals, crisp sparkle, and sub-bass grunt without mid-bass bloat.
Super* Review original ranking
Super* Review Youtube ChannelThieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Jays Audio
HYPE 4 comes across as the sweet spot of the series: less bass than the HYPE 10, but tighter control with a midrange that feels more natural and unmasked. Listeners called it smoother and more versatile, with punch that doesn’t bleed into the mids and more apparent detail than the HYPE 2 and 10. Several blind testers either preferred it outright or put it neck-and-neck with higher-priced sets, estimating it around “$500” based on sound, while the actual tag sits near $400.
Against the rest, the HYPE 10 drew comments like “boomy,” “less cohesive,” and occasionally underwhelming, while the HYPE 2 read as Harman’s “cooler brother” with fuller male vocals but lower technical ceiling. The Monarch MK3 still edges the field on overall cleanliness, “air,” and refinement, and some would pay the extra $100 to jump there. But viewed through price-performance, the takeaway stayed consistent: HYPE 4 is the most worth it pick for most people, delivering a balanced, engaging presentation without the bloat or brightness trade-offs seen elsewhere in the lineup.
Jays Audio Youtube Channel
Dunu DK-3001 BD reviewed by Jays Audio
Jays Audio Youtube Channel
Thieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Jaytiss
Thieaudio Hype 4 arrives with surprisingly premium trimmings: a compact, comfortable shell (though some ears may need tip rolling for a secure seal), a supple cable akin to the latest Oracle 2/Monarch MKIII leads with a durable 3.5 mm plug, and a classy case lifted straight from pricier models. Overall presentation feels 2–3× its price, with tidy accessories and a cable that’s pleasant in hand even if it won’t lay perfectly flat.
Sonically it’s impactful and engaging: bass is lush and deep without smearing, mids keep vocals forward yet smooth for podcasts, and treble has air and detail without piercing. The tuning graph shows excellent channel matching and hugs a preferred target—3 kHz rise with a 5–6 kHz dip—which explains the easygoing clarity. Minor nitpicks surface: some cymbal shimmer can feel a touch “off,” and a few drum hits could carry more thump/realism; otherwise it’s a cohesive, “just sounds right” presentation that can deliver goosebump moments when the beat drops.
Against peers, Hype 4 comes off as a safer buy and more exciting listen than the Hisenior Mega5 EST (cheaper, better cable/case, and far less dull). It edges the Binary Chopin on overall quality—though Chopin stays a killer budget pick—and proves more fun and library-friendly than the detail-leaning Performer 8. Versus Monarch MKII it’s livelier with better sub-bass and treble reach; compared with Monarch MKIII, it avoids the fatiguing 4–6 kHz energy. The verdict: a mid-fi standout with near top-tier tuning, top-shelf packaging, and a value that challenges pricier options—highly recommended despite not being the absolute cheapest route to great sound.
Jaytiss Youtube Channel
Dunu DK-3001 BD reviewed by Jaytiss
Build & accessories are dialed: a glossy white shell with a subtle steampunk-style faceplate, a metallic nozzle with filter that holds tips securely, and a comfy, slightly thicker ergonomic body. The cable uses recessed 2-pin sockets and DUNU’s swappable terminations (quick screw-on system), plus a quality Y-split, locking chin slider, and a leather cable tie; the right side is red-marked for easy orientation. The package is stacked with tips, a 6.3 mm adapter, and a handsome, leather-textured magnetic case that feels premium. Colorway might divide tastes, but the overall presentation lands as exceptional.
Sonically, this hybrid (dynamic + BAs + micro-planars) aims for a slight U-shape with an even keel: clean vocals, crisp detail, and standout treble extension and air without tipping into fatigue. Bass is tasteful but a bit tucked, note weight leans lighter, while imaging is precise and the soundstage feels open and hi-fi. Compared with DUNU’s Da Vinci/Mirai, this brings more upper-energy and extension; versus sets like Pilgrim, Kiwi Ears 4, and Studio 4, it keeps the sparkle yet sounds more complete up top.
The twist: add an ~80 Ω impedance adapter and the DK-3001 BD flips from neutral-leaning to a fun, bassy brawler—bigger slam, cleaner upper-mids, treble air intact, with diminishing returns above ~80 Ω. That puts it toe-to-toe with curves reminiscent of Fatfreq Deuce (but with smoother highs) and even the HiSenior Mega5EST (Bass) vibe. Stock, it’s a firm S-tier pick that prioritizes extension, imaging, and refinement; with the adapter (or a touch of EQ), it climbs to an even higher S. For a $500–$1,000 bracket IEM, this is a standout all-rounder that many enthusiasts might reach for even over pricier sets.
Jaytiss Youtube Channel
Thieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Gizaudio Axel
Gizaudio Axel original ranking
Gizaudio Axel Youtube ChannelDunu DK-3001 BD reviewed by Gizaudio Axel
Gizaudio Axel original ranking
Gizaudio Axel Youtube ChannelThieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Z-Reviews
Thieaudio Hype 4 delivers the redemption arc this series needed: a $399 hybrid that channels the beloved Clairvoyance vibe at a lower price. The 2DD+4BA setup hits with a chest-filling low end—powerful yet clean—while treble comes through with airy, flute-and-violin sheen, free of splash. Imaging feels gapless and pinpoint; handclaps and spatial cues lock into place with convincing realism. Despite “studio monitor” marketing, the tuning is smooth and musical rather than dry or clinical, inviting long sessions and even some dancing. Tip rolling (from silicone to foam-injected silicone) nudges seal and focus but doesn’t derail the signature, signaling a universally forgiving character.
At 17 Ω, the Hype 4 is easy to drive and plays nicely with everything from sterile DAC/amps to warmer class-A and even tubes—differences show as subtle nuance, not hit-or-miss synergy. Build is handsome in black/blue/white shells (the white “dragon-meat” look gets a wink), with a comfy deep-recessed 2-pin fit and decent included tips/foams. The miss: a non-modular 3.5 mm cable at this price, plus the usual accessory minimalism. Sonically, though, this feels like the $600-tier polish of the old Clairvoyance—cohesive, punchy, and silky across the band—making Hype 4 an easy recommendation. Final verdict: a confident 9/10 on sound, dinged mainly for the cable, and a clear “this is what Thieaudio should sound like” moment.
Z-Reviews Youtube Channel
Dunu DK-3001 BD reviewed by Z-Reviews
10/10 verdict out the gate: Dunu’s DK-3001 BD “BrainDance” is a $500 monster that punches like a flagship. The recipe is wild—9 drivers total with the same dynamic driver from the Glacier plus 4 BAs (2 mids, 2 highs) and 4 micro-planars for treble. The result lands reference-neutral yet intensely revealing: guitar picks feel physical, bass hits with presence but never bloat, and the top end is creamy, airy, and precise without edge—more “how is it doing that?” than “too much treble.” Think high-end studio flatness that still moves the music. It doesn’t need exotic power; it actually shines on simple, linear amps (skip the tube goo). Clear Best-of-the-Year contender and easily “sell-other-stuff-to-keep-this” territory.
Build and kit are peak DUNU. The shells are big yet comfortable, finished in white with tidy details. The cable is excellent with Q-Lock mini modular plugs—3.5mm and 4.4mm included—and the set comes loaded with tips, including the beloved DUNU S&S. Strong PSA: choose the 2-pin version (MMCX is offered but not preferred). Accessories bag is generous if a bit over the top on the case. Sonically, this threatens the usual $500 kings (even stepping on the toes of costlier sets like Glacier, given the shared DD) and makes previous favorites like Mega5 EST no longer auto-wins. In short: a flagship-feels experience at mid-price that delivers the elusive “brain dance” without any nasty trade-offs.
Z-Reviews Youtube Channel
Thieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Tim Tuned
Dunu DK-3001 BD reviewed by Tim Tuned
Thieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Precogvision
Precogvision Youtube Channel
Dunu DK-3001 BD reviewed by Precogvision
Precogvision Youtube Channel
Thieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by
Fresh Reviews
Thieaudio HYPE 4 hits far above its price with a lively, bass-driven tuning that stays clean and controlled. The low end delivers physicality without muddying the mids or presence region, evoking a “mini Monarch MK3” vibe for music playback. Resolution and micro-detail—fingers on strings, vocal intimacy—come through impressively, though note that pairing (e.g., a Topping DX9) can influence bass texture and perceived air.
In competitive titles, HYPE 4 reduces ambient haze so audio cues cut through like they’re “piercing a fog,” elevating depth perception and imaging. It takes the edge in Apex Legends, The Finals, and Counter-Strike 2, where some effects can sound metallic on other sets; here, separation remains intact even amid explosions and ultimates. Despite the energetic low end, separation stays steady and never overwhelms complex scenes.
Versus the Yanyin Canon 2, HYPE 4 is the more fun and slightly more resolving listen; Canon 2 can be preferable on tight, bass-heavy maps in Valorant and Fortnite, with Rainbow Six Siege essentially a toss-up. Comfort is close, with a slight fit edge to HYPE 4 over longer sessions. Overall gaming grade sits around a B+ (≈88 ±2) on the “wallhack certified” list—an excellent hybrid that bridges music enjoyment and competitive clarity at its price.
Fresh Reviews original ranking
Fresh Reviews Youtube Channel
Dunu DK-3001 BD reviewed by
Fresh Reviews
Dunu DK-3001 BD delivers a premium package: a tribrid array with 1 dynamic + 4 BA + 4 micro planar drivers per side inside a striking white aluminum-alloy shell. Despite being ~8 g each, the ergonomic shape sits comfortably once tip-rolled; MMCX connectors, a braided cable with cloth sheath, and interchangeable terminations (3.5 / 4.4 / 6.35) round out a generous unboxing that includes a sturdy case, clip, cleaning tools, and multiple tip sets—Dunu Candy tips pair well, while longer SednaEarfits can tease out a touch more sub-bass.
Tonally, this leans neutral with sub-bass boost: elevated low-end rumble, a mid-bass dip, and a mild 1–3 kHz recession before a clean, extended, and airy treble. The top end is fast, spacious, and resolving with excellent separation and layering; sub-bass has texture and reverb without turning muddy. That mid-bass/low-mid and low-treble shaping can soften some mid-band cues, but overall presentation stays natural, spacious, and highly engaging—especially for music, where detail retrieval and staging shine.
For competitive gaming, placement lands at a B+ overall, bordering A-. In CS2, footstep clarity, gunfire control, and treble layering are stellar (A-/B+ feel). In Apex and Valorant, long-range shots, verticality, and bright cues are pinpoint, but certain mid-bass and 1–3 kHz events (light slides, some footfalls, shield cells) can sit back, trimming depth precision versus top meta picks. In the latest Warzone Resurgence, the tuning complements the engine well—pushing sub-bass cues cleanly without masking. A touch of EQ could nudge it into clear A territory for shooters; as is, it’s a great all-rounder that’s very good for competitive play and even better for music.
Fresh Reviews original ranking
Fresh Reviews Youtube ChannelThieaudio Hype 4 (more reviews)
Thieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Audionotions
Thieaudio Hype 4 reviewed by Shuwa-T
Thieaudio Hype 4 Details
Driver Configuration: 2DD+4BA
Tuning Type: JM1 ish
Top Neutral IEMs
Brand: ThieAudio Top ThieAudio IEMs
Price (Msrp): $400
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Dunu DK-3001 BD Details
Driver Configuration: 1DD+4BA+4P
Tuning Type: Treble slight v
Top V-Shaped IEMs
Brand: DUNU Top DUNU IEMs
Price (Msrp): $500
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Thieaudio Hype 4 User Review Score
Average User Scores
Average User Score:
Based on 1 user reviews
8Very Positive
Dunu DK-3001 BD User Review Score
Average User Scores
Average User Score: n/a
Based on 0 user reviews
No user reviews yet. Be the first one who writes a review!
Thieaudio Hype 4 Gaming Score

Gaming Score & Grade
- The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.
Gaming Score
7.2Gaming Grade
A-Dunu DK-3001 BD Gaming Score

Gaming Score & Grade
- The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.
Gaming Score
7.4Gaming Grade
A-Thieaudio Hype 4 Scorings
Average Technical & Tuning Grades
Average Tunign Grade
A-- Pleasing tonal balance with good technical control. Minor quirks present but not distracting. Demonstrates decent genre versatility.
Average Technical Grade
A-- Competent technical presentation. Handles separation and detail well in most tracks, with modest soundstage and acceptable imaging capabilities.
Dunu DK-3001 BD Scorings
Average Technical & Tuning Grades
Average Tunign Grade
B+- Generally enjoyable tonal character with some noticeable unevenness. Maintains listenability while showing room for refinement in frequency balance.
Average Technical Grade
A- Good technical performance. Clear separation and decent detail retrieval across various tracks. Soundstage shows reasonable width and depth.
Thieaudio Hype 4 User Reviews
Share your experience and build your personal ranking list.
You need to be signed in to write your own reviewClean V-Shaped set, with good technical performance, and smooth, luscious bass that seems to float in the mix. Unfortunately has spicy air treble (tip rolling necessary), but otherwise is a very engaging and good set.
Pros
The bass quality is great. Bass texture is phenomenal. Sounds like a sub in a large room. Other than that, the set has decent tech, soundstage, and overall tuning. Very good build quality. For bassheads.Cons
Bass can bleed slightly into mids. Air frequencies can be extremely distracting, so tip rolling is a must, especially due to the strange and extremely large fit. Pinna gain at 3khz can be too forward for some users. Imaging + separation ≈ 200$ set worth.Dunu DK-3001 BD User Reviews
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Pros
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Cons
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