Unique Melody MEST VS Letshuoer Mystic 8

IEM Comparison: Expert & Community Scores Side-by-Side

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Unique Melody MEST and Letshuoer Mystic 8 use 1DD+4BA+2EST+1BC and 8BA driver setups respectively. Unique Melody MEST costs $1,000 while Letshuoer Mystic 8 costs $1,000. Letshuoer Mystic 8 holds a clear 0.7-point edge in reviewer scores (7.7 vs 8.4). Unique Melody MEST has better bass with a 0.8-point edge, Letshuoer Mystic 8 has significantly better treble with a 1.4-point edge, Letshuoer Mystic 8 has better dynamics with a 0.5-point edge, Letshuoer Mystic 8 has better soundstage with a 0.5-point edge, Unique Melody MEST has slightly better details with a 0.3-point edge and Unique Melody MEST has better imaging with a 0.8-point edge.

Insights

Metric Unique Melody MEST Letshuoer Mystic 8
Bass 7.7 6.8
Mids 7.7 7.9
Treble 6.8 8.3
Details 8.3 8
Soundstage 8 8.5
Imaging 8.8 8
Dynamics 6 6.5
Tonality 7.3 7.8
Technicalities 8.2 8.2

Unique Melody MEST Aggregated Review Score

Average Reviewer Scores

Crin
Shuwa-T Precogvision Tim Tuned
Jays Audio
Super* Review

Average Reviewer Score:

7.7

Strongly Favorable


Letshuoer Mystic 8 Aggregated Review Score

Average Reviewer Scores

Bad Guy Good Audio Smirk Audio
Jaytiss Shuwa-T Gizaudio Axel
Z-Reviews Super* Review Jays Audio

Average Reviewer Score:

8.4

Very Positive


Unique Melody MEST User Review Score

Average User Scores

Average User Score: n/a

Based on 0 user reviews

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Letshuoer Mystic 8 User Review Score

Average User Scores

Average User Score: n/a

Based on 0 user reviews

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Unique Melody MEST Gaming Score

Gaming Score & Grade

  • The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.

Gaming Score

6.9

Gaming Grade

B+

Letshuoer Mystic 8 Gaming Score

Gaming Score & Grade

  • The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.

Gaming Score

7.1

Gaming Grade

A-

Unique Melody MEST 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+
  • Very competent with articulate presentation. Well-defined layers and precise imaging. Soundstage is immersive and handles dynamics well.
Bass A
Strong, well-defined bass with good texture. Delivers satisfying punch and rumble without overwhelming other frequencies.
Mids A
Excellent midrange with natural timbre and great detail retrieval. Vocals are forward and emotive with lifelike instrument reproduction.
Treble B+
Good treble response - clear and detailed without fatigue. Well-extended with proper air and sparkle.
Dynamics B
Good dynamic expression with solid impact. Handles volume contrasts well while maintaining good transient snap.
Soundstage A+
Exceptional soundstage with holographic imaging. Creates a truly three-dimensional space where instruments float naturally around you.
Details A+
Exceptional resolution that uncovers the deepest layers. Retrieves even the most minute details while maintaining natural timbre.
Imaging S-
Exceptional imaging with holographic precision. Creates a palpable sense of physical placement with perfect positional stability.
Gaming B+
Respectable environmental presentation favors atmosphere over precision. Detects obvious directional cues while conveying game world ambiance. Bad value-to-cost for gaming purpose - not recommended

Letshuoer Mystic 8 Scorings

Average Technical & Tuning Grades

Average Tunign Grade

A
  • Well-executed tonal character. No major flaws with good technical control. Smooth presentation works with multiple genres.

Average Technical Grade

A+
  • Very competent with articulate presentation. Well-defined layers and precise imaging. Soundstage is immersive and handles dynamics well.
Bass B+
Good bass foundation with decent impact. Maintains acceptable control while providing satisfying thump in most tracks.
Mids A
Excellent midrange with natural timbre and great detail retrieval. Vocals are forward and emotive with lifelike instrument reproduction.
Treble A+
Superb treble: effortless extension with crystal clarity. Perfect balance of sparkle and smoothness with exceptional detail.
Dynamics B+
Good dynamic expression with solid impact. Handles volume contrasts well while maintaining good transient snap.
Soundstage S-
Exceptional soundstage with holographic imaging. Creates a truly three-dimensional space where instruments float naturally around you.
Details A+
Exceptional resolution that uncovers the deepest layers. Retrieves even the most minute details while maintaining natural timbre.
Imaging A+
Exceptional imaging with holographic precision. Creates a palpable sense of physical placement with perfect positional stability.
Gaming A-
Good fundamental spatial awareness for most gaming scenarios. Handles basic positioning well but may lack nuance in complex situations. Bad value-to-cost for gaming purpose - not recommended

Unique Melody MEST Reviews

Reviewed by: Super* Review

Super* Review 9* * score normalized

Reviewed by: Jays Audio

Jays Audio 8.5 Reviewer Score
S- Tuning
S Tech
A MEST MK2 with slightly more uppermid/bass. More v-shaped. Even more AGGRESSIVE than MK2. Also gets fatiguing when cranked up/long-listening sesisons.

Jays Audio original ranking

Jays Audio Youtube Channel

Reviewed by: Shuwa-T

Shuwa-T 7.9 Reviewer Score
A Tuning
A+ Tech
Comment: Neutral yet fun due to subbass hump. Impressive clarity, holographic soundstage

Shuwa-T original ranking

Shuwa-T Website

Bass: A+ Mids: A- Treble: A Soundstage: A+ Details: S- Imaging: S-

Reviewed by: Precogvision

Precogvision 7.2 Reviewer Score
A- Tuning
A Tech
Engaging imaging with some minor coherency issues.

Precogvision original ranking

Precogvision Youtube Channel
Bass: A- Mids: A+ Treble: B Dynamics: B Details: A+ Imaging: S

Reviewed by: Tim Tuned

Tim Tuned 7 Reviewer Score
A- Tuning
S Tech
Impressive staging and details Aggressive signature

Tim Tuned original ranking

Tim Tuned Youtube Channel
Bass: A+ Mids: A+ Treble: A-

Reviewed by: Crin

Crin 6.5 Reviewer Score
B+ Tuning
A- Tech
A smooth, relaxing listen (in custom form) backed up with good technicalities.

Crin original ranking

Crin Youtube Channel

Letshuoer Mystic 8 Reviews

Reviewed by: Z-Reviews

Z-Reviews 9 * score normalized

Letshuoer Mystic 8 leans hard into “flagship” theatrics: a cat-themed shell, a fancy case with a suction-seal lid, and even bonus jewelry in the box—plus a tray of 18 silicone tips. The metal shells are surprisingly light, the nozzle is long and secure, and fit feels pressure-free rather than stuffed into a tube. The cable looks premium but is very thin, fixed to a 4.4 mm plug with no swappable heads, and carries a leather “sound alive” strap that can’t be removed. Branding/marketing gets a little mystical (phantom cat, starlight, mist), but the build and accessories are undeniably luxe.

Sonically, this is the rare all-BA set that doesn’t sound like one. With an 8-BA array, 4-way tubes, a 3-way crossover, and a low-pass module, the presentation is effortless, tight, and strikingly natural from whisper to “send it.” Transients feel fast—notes appear, clean up, and reset before the next one hits—so the stage reads organized and pinpoint; imaging is “banjo at 1.4° right” levels of precise. Bass doesn’t mimic a big DD’s shove, but it’s taut and sufficient; treble is delicate and refined without splash; mids land neutrally and never shout. It’s also easy to drive and doesn’t need break-in—just plug in and go, then keep turning up without the tuning falling apart.

Source synergy leans toward clean, unflavored players (e.g., warmer DAPs like the Shanling M5 Ultra paired beautifully, while some studio DACs felt flatter). Against kilobuck staples like Monarch, Mystic 8 reads more “plain” in the best way—accurate, open-feeling, and non-insistent. Quibbles: that non-removable strap, the fixed 4.4 mm, and the thinness of the cable at this price. But the verdict is clear: once the music starts, this set shifts from fashion piece to genuinely special transducer—$1,000-worthy for listeners chasing speed, control, and a “disappears-in-the-ears” experience.


Z-Reviews original ranking

Z-Reviews Youtube Channel
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Reviewed by: Super* Review

Super* Review 9* * score normalized
Surprising in a lot of fronts. Maybe a little bit overpriced but I like it

Letshuoer Mystic 8 lands as a surprising all-BA flagship (~$1,000) from a brand better known for budget planars—complete with a metal storage puck, multiple tip sets, a microfiber cloth… and even a necklace and “cat” ring. Build is standout: compact titanium shells with a subtle feline motif (gem-like eye), small flush fit, and a semi-custom contour that sits very stable once sealed. The nozzle runs a bit long (~6.1 mm), so shorter tips help; that rear wing may bug some ears, but overall comfort and stability are excellent—even sleepable. The weak link is the thin, tangle-prone cable with an unremovable leather tag, though the simple plastic 2-pin connectors are refreshingly practical.

Tonally it’s a bright-leaning neutral: lean lower mids/upper bass, a sub-bass-focused lift (from ~80 Hz down), and a touch of upper-treble energy. Not a basshead set, yet notes carry surprising weight, giving metallic instruments satisfying body without turning dry. Staging and separation are clean, but imaging performance is only mid-pack at the price; the presentation favors macro contrast over micro-texture. A small mid-bass bump (≈ +3 dB around 80 Hz) sweetens the balance. Versus Moondrop S8, the S8 digs more micro detail and images better, but lacks the Mystic 8’s heft. Versus Seventh Acoustics Supernova, Supernova images best and sounds warmer with more mid-bass, though a bit drier. Net: a distinctive, well-built, comfortable set with a unique look and engaging contrast—4/5 stars, if a touch pricey.


Super* Review original ranking

Super* Review Youtube Channel

Reviewed by: Jays Audio

Jays Audio 9 Reviewer Score
S Tuning
S Tech
Vocal benchmark for female vocals under $2000. Clean, airy, sweet, ethereal. Better than Diva and direct upgrade to OG Oracle and OG Mangird Tea. What the Braindamage and Cantor wishes they could be. Great technical performance, and scales decently well. Recommended listening volume is mid to high volume around 75-80dbs. Not for bassy libraries like hiphop, and can be a bit energetic on kpop/jpop/rock stuff with a lot of treble.

Letshuoer Mystic 8 comes out swinging as a vocal-centric, bright-leaning all-BA set with unusually natural tonality and refined technicalities. Female vocals are the headliner—sweet, airy, and “pure”—without the shrill edge or artificial sheen heard on sets like Brain Dance or Cantor, and fuller, more musical than the clinical Meteor. Stage feels open with strong separation, smooth yet extended treble, and resolution around a Prestige LTD tier. It scales beautifully at mid to mid-high volume (≈75–80 dB), where intimacy and micro-detail bloom.

The low end isn’t about slam, but it’s tight, fast, and well-layered, with a natural mid-bass/lower-mid body that keeps vocals grounded. For hip-hop/R&B/EDM, bass-heavier alternatives will punch harder; on energetic tracks (K-Pop/J-Pop/treble-hot rock) the Mystic 8 can get spicy above ~65 dB, though it remains less fatiguing than the mentioned rivals. Overall, it’s a clean, balanced, bright-tilted tuning that prioritizes air, articulation, and vocal nuance over brute force.

Versus Diva, Mystic 8 offers tamer 1–3 kHz energy, better volume scaling, more natural male vocals, and extra air/detail—while being far cheaper. It feels like a refined, slightly sparklier upgrade over the OG Oracle, and a smoother, airier take on the Mangird Tea vibe. Softears RSV still rules for powerful, forward vocal weight (especially male), but Mystic 8 is cleaner, more spacious, and sweeter for female artists. For all-rounding, Monarch Mk3 and Volür cover pop/hip-hop better; Prestige LTD is the fun V-shaped detour. Gripes? The accessories—cable and case—feel budget at a $1,000 price. Everything else signals an endgame contender for ballads, indie, and slower rock with some of the best female vocals this side of far pricier flagships.


Jays Audio original ranking

Jays Audio Youtube Channel

Reviewed by: Jaytiss

Jaytiss 8.6 Reviewer Score
A Tuning
S Tech
Lack Bass Richness, but is a beautiful set.

Build and presentation hit above the price rumor: a dense, metallic shell with a sleek “cat” motif, excellent nozzle/fit, and a surprisingly handy case with a rubber lid that’s easy to pop open. The 8-BA array (Sonion + “NSBA” branded drivers) gives it pedigree, while the stock cable feels a bit chintzy despite a 4.4 mm termination and chin slider. Final pricing isn’t set (the placeholder listing is a meme), but the talk is roughly around $1,000, which frames expectations for the rest.

On tuning, Mystic 8 comes across reference-lean, very clean and clear, with extended upper-mids/treble and a lighter bass shelf. It’s a laid-back, chill listen with strong micro-detail, imaging, and stage, but the macrodynamics feel reserved and the bass lacks some rich, organic texture; hip-hop and slam-seekers may bounce. A small EQ bass lift (sub/mid-bass shelf) unlocks body and brings the set to life without breaking its neutral poise.

In context, it outclasses Cadenza 4 for naturalness and timbre, while Cadenza 12 (2024) offers richer bass but has an odd upper-mid quirk and a much higher tag. The FR echoes the Monarch Mk II; if Monarch felt light down low, Mystic 8 won’t fix that, though it crushes it on shell/build. Versus sets like Thieaudio Origin (bigger shell, weaker micro-detail), Canpur Verdandi (more bass/upper-mid bite), or DAA Mecha (fun but not neutral), Mystic 8 positions itself as a refined, mid-focused all-BA with standout technicals and an ownership appeal. As a ~$1k competitor, it’s compelling—just not the most visceral/engaging without that tasteful EQ nudge.

Mids: A+ Treble: S Dynamics: C+ Soundstage: S-

Jaytiss original ranking

Jaytiss Youtube Channel

Reviewed by: Shuwa-T

Shuwa-T 8.3 Reviewer Score
A Tuning
S- Tech
Vocal magic, midrange and upper mids are crystal clear while never being too technical Both sub and midbass presence is less than normal which makes this more genre specific, not particularly suited for bass heavy genres

Shuwa-T original ranking

Shuwa-T Website

Bass: B+ Mids: S- Treble: S- Soundstage: S- Details: S- Imaging: S

Reviewed by: Gizaudio Axel

2025-09-07
Gizaudio Axel 8 Reviewer Score
A+ Tuning
A+ Tech
Neutral-bright tuning with natural midrange tone. Vocal-focused with realistic timbre. Natural, lifelike mids and vocals. Refined treble with air and clarity. Good technicalities. Light BA bass. Unvented design. Upper treble may bother those who are extra sensitive to treble.

Letshuoer Mystic 8 arrives as an all-BA set (eight drivers per side) with a compact titanium-alloy build and the striking “Phantom Cat” faceplate. The accessories mirror Letshuoer’s DX1: a sturdy metal-bottom case, nine pairs of silicone tips, cleaning tools, and a non-modular 4.4 mm cable that’s thin, soft, and non-microphonic but a bit tangle-prone. The shells are smooth with no sharp edges, sit flush, and isolate well; comfort is frankly exceptional. As with many all-BA designs there can be some pressure build-up, so sensitive listeners may want to demo first. Tuning is neutral-bright: the BA bass is light on slam yet tight and sufficient to ground the presentation without bleeding into the mids.

The star here is the mid-range: vocals sound lifelike, instruments carry natural tone and convincing timbre, and note weight feels just right. Treble sits slightly above neutral with an upper-treble lift that adds air and openness without harshness or sibilance; cymbals come through crisp rather than metallic. Technicals are solid rather than showy—good resolution, imaging, and separation with an open stage—placed below peak “detail monsters” but still satisfying. Versus Studio 4, Mystic 8 brings more air, energy, and stronger separation; compared to Luna, it trades that warmer, fuller body for cleaner mids and more refined treble; up against the “Caner” 14-BA set, it cedes ultimate detail and bass impact but wins on natural tonality. Recommended for listeners who prioritize mid-range realism and a clear, lively top end; not ideal for bassheads, those highly sensitive to upper-treble lift, or anyone bothered by BA pressure. Final verdict: a confident 4/5 for its engaging neutrality and superb comfort.


Gizaudio Axel original ranking

Gizaudio Axel Youtube Channel

Reviewed by: Bad Guy Good Audio

Bad Guy Good Audio 7.9 Reviewer Score
A- Tuning
A- Tech

Eight balanced armatures (4 Sonion, 4 Knowles) and a lighter, more comfortable fit give the Letshuoer Mystic 8 a strong first impression. The frequency response shows sub-bass priority over mid-bass with a long, even midrange “porch,” creating space and clarity. Against the Cadenza 12, the Mystic 8 comes off less heavy yet more agreeable in tuning, making it one of Letshuoer’s better executions to date. Sticker price discussion aside, the assumption that the priciest model is the best gets challenged here.

On low end, this is not a basshead set yet it doesn’t feel bass-light: 808 drops hit cleanly, bass guitar texture pops, and kick drum carries satisfying punch—surprisingly fuller than the graph or the Cadenza 12 comparison suggests. The mids are the star: vocals sound natural and present without mid-bass bloat or shouty upper-mids, while treble harmonics stay controlled to avoid fatigue. Overall verdict: a solid “competes with peers” in the $1,000 arena, flirting with “I’d buy it” after proper listening time—proof that tuning and execution matter more than driver counts and flagship labels.

Bass: A- Mids: A+ Treble: A+

Bad Guy Good Audio original ranking

Bad Guy Good Audio Youtube Channel

Reviewed by: Smirk Audio

2025-07-16
Smirk Audio 7.4 Reviewer Score
A- Tuning
A Tech
check links for more info:

Smirk Audio original ranking

Smirk Audio Head-Fi Profile

Bass: A- Mids: A- Treble: A Dynamics: A+ Details: A Imaging: A-

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