Xenns Tea Pro and Yanyin Canon II use 2DD+6BA and 1DD+4BA driver setups respectively. Xenns Tea Pro costs $359 while Yanyin Canon II costs $379. Yanyin Canon II is $20 more expensive. Xenns Tea Pro holds a slight 0.1-point edge in reviewer scores (7.5 vs 7.4). Xenns Tea Pro carries a user score of 8.
Insights
| Metric | Xenns Tea Pro | Yanyin Canon II |
|---|---|---|
| Bass | 8 | 7.4 |
| Mids | 7.3 | 7.4 |
| Treble | 7.7 | 7.4 |
| Soundstage | 7 | 7.4 |
| Dynamics | 6 | 7.4 |
| Tonality | 7.3 | 7.5 |
| Technicalities | 7.2 | 6.8 |
Xenns Tea Pro Aggregated Review Score
Average Reviewer Scores
Average Reviewer Score:
7.5Strongly Favorable
Yanyin Canon II Aggregated Review Score
Average Reviewer Scores
Average Reviewer Score:
7.4Generally Favorable
Reviews Comparison
Xenns Tea Pro reviewed by Z-Reviews
Youtube Video Summary
Xenns Tea Pro lands with the familiar “Tea” swagger: a baby-blue, sparkled shell that looks subdued but premium, a modular 3.5/4.4 cable that clicks together more cleanly than most, and the infamous ultra-soft pouch (yes, the “chinchilla” one). Build is hefty yet comfortable, with a tiny ear “shelf” that doesn’t poke and giant L/R markers that actually help. Inside is an 8-driver stack—2 dynamic + 6 balanced armatures—priced around $360, right in the historic Tea lane. Wide-bore tips can make the upper range shouty, but switch to foams or X-Elastic and the tuning snaps into place: smooth, powerful, and deeply satisfying.
Sonically it’s the sports car that rides like a chaise lounge: speed and detail on tap, but with the warmth dialed up ~20% so long sessions feel luxurious. Bass reaches low with a tactile rumble that sneaks up in tracks, mids are rich and present, and treble is tastefully shaved to avoid glare—energy without edge. The stage isn’t stadium-wide; instead it’s an immersive “pressed-in” bubble that places the orchestra around the head with excellent instrument presence and macro-dynamics. It carries the Tea/T2 lineage forward by focusing less on sterile “detail points” and more on excitement and physicality—music shoved into the ear in the most pleasurable way. Verdict: an unabashed 10/10 crowd-pleaser in its bracket and a default recommendation—pop on the 4.4 plug, use the right tips, and let it cook.
Z-Reviews Youtube Channel
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Yanyin Canon II reviewed by Z-Reviews
Youtube Video Summary
Yanyin Canon II hits with a five-driver hybrid (4BA + 1DD) that’s all about huge stage, deep layering, and an addicting sense of air. Two rear switches offer four tunings but they mostly shift bass; the sweet spot is both switches up/up for a rich, room-filling low end that stays clean and separated. It feels like a “$1,000 sound” at ~$379, blending drivers more seamlessly than most 1DD+BA mixes while throwing width and depth that rival favorite wide-stagers like BLON Jojo—only far more refined.
Build and kit are a mixed bag—great cable options (3.5/4.4/2.5) and solid machining, but the box is foam-heavy and tips are basic. Efficiency isn’t extreme, so a balanced output helps. Tip rolling matters: Dekoni foams bring a smooth, natural balance; Sedna Xelastec adds clarity but can get edgy; Dunu SS flattens the mids; “Render” tips push treble a bit too hard. With the bass switches up and foams on, Canon II becomes a big, natural, effortless listen—the kind of tuning that invites dancing rather than nitpicking, and easily one of the most satisfying 4BA+1DD executions heard this year.
Z-Reviews Youtube Channel
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Xenns Tea Pro reviewed by
Fresh Reviews
Youtube Video Summary
Build & presentation scream premium: a matte metal alloy shell with lush green-blue fade and gold script, plus a black-silver sparkle faceplate that looks like wearable art. Ergonomics are excellent despite a slightly wider nozzle and a bit of heft, allowing long sessions without discomfort. The package impresses with a gallery-style unboxing, matching carrying case, and a silver cable with interchangeable 3.5/4.4 terminations. Under the hood: 2 dynamic drivers + 6 BAs at ~$360.
Tonally it’s a balanced, warmer-leaning set with elevated sub-bass depth, clean attack/decay, and more treble extension and sparkle than comparable sets. The stage sits a touch more intimate, but separation and layering are immaculate, and imaging locks in with precision. Mids don’t pop as forward as some peers, yet overall resolution stays high with “oodles of detail,” giving music a rich, cohesive presentation that still feels highly detailed.
For competitive play the performance is A-tier: in Apex, Valorant, and especially Call of Duty, imaging and depth perception are master-class. Gunfire comes through cleaner with less reverb; airstrikes and mortar noise get pushed back so crucial cues like footsteps, slides, and shield pops cut through. The more intimate stage aids crosshair placement and micro-positioning, while separation stays clear even in chaotic fights. Verdict: a high A- on the Wall-Hack Certified list—an excellent pick for gamers wanting warmth, sub-bass authority, and elite imaging without sacrificing musical enjoyment.
Fresh Reviews original ranking
Fresh Reviews Youtube Channel
Yanyin Canon II reviewed by
Fresh Reviews
Youtube Video Summary
The Yanyin Canon II comes in at $379 with a roomy faux-leather case, a solid 2-pin cable, and a striking faceplate. It’s a 4BA + 1DD hybrid with dip switches (default: 1 up / 2 down) that let the bass profile swing subtly to taste. Versus current favorites, sub- and mid-bass sit between the Zens Top (more rumble) and Kiwi Ears Orchestra Lite (less), but the Canon II’s low end hits cleaner and faster than both, avoiding bloat while keeping satisfying weight. Ergonomics are a win too—more comfortable for long sessions than Orchestra Lite, with better verticality, depth, separation, and layering.
In games, Canon II is a beast: the bass control sharpens positional cues, the stage sits slightly closer for emphasis, and treble stays non-fatiguing—no shout, no sting on gunshots or armor cracks. The Zens Top still stretches a touch wider and airier with a notch higher resolution, but asks more money and brings a bit more rumble; unless that extra sub/mid-bass is the goal, Canon II is the smarter pick. Orchestra Lite owners won’t feel forced to upgrade, yet Canon II is clearly a technical step up. Net result: an exceptional all-rounder for music and gaming, trading a hair of ultimate space for control, coherence, and comfort—easily a top recommendation at its price.
Fresh Reviews original ranking
Fresh Reviews Youtube ChannelXenns Tea Pro reviewed by Head-Fi.org
Yanyin Canon II reviewed by Head-Fi.org
Xenns Tea Pro reviewed by Web Search
The Xenns Mangird Tea Pro offers a bass response that emphasizes sub-bass depth with a noticeable +3dB lift at 20Hz, providing substantial rumble without overwhelming the mid-bass. This allows bass guitars and electronic textures to feel tactile and controlled, while the midrange retains warmth and naturalism, particularly for male vocals and acoustic instruments. Some listeners might detect slight BA timbre in upper mids with certain female vocals or woodwind passages, though overall tonality remains engaging and rich .
Treble presentation is smooth and non-fatiguing, with adequate sparkle for cymbal decays and micro-details, though absolute air and extension fall short of EST-equipped competitors. Soundstage width leans intimate, prioritizing precise imaging and separation over vast spaciousness, while the aluminum/resin shells offer durability but may challenge smaller ears for long-term fit. The included modular cable provides termination flexibility but draws criticism for its stiffness and ergonomics .
Yanyin Canon II reviewed by Web Search
The Yanyin Canon II delivers a bass performance that stands out in its price range, offering deep extension and textured rumble without overwhelming the mix. Its bio-diaphragm dynamic driver, housed in a dual-chamber design, provides tight control and physicality to low frequencies, making genres like hip-hop and electronic music particularly engaging. The warm, rich midrange maintains good vocal presence and natural timbre, though upper mids can occasionally border on shoutiness with certain tracks.
Treble response is well-extended but exhibits minor inconsistencies, with some roughness in cymbal crashes and upper harmonics that can detract from long-term listening comfort. Technically, the IEM excels in resolution and imaging precision, presenting instruments with strong separation, though its soundstage width remains average. The two bass tuning switches offer subtle adjustments rather than transformative changes, limiting sound customization versatility.
Comfort is a highlight, with the medical-grade resin shells providing an ergonomic fit suitable for extended sessions. However, accessories feel sparse for the price, including only basic ear tips and a serviceable cable. Isolation proves adequate for daily use despite the vented design.
Xenns Tea Pro (more reviews)
Xenns Tea Pro reviewed by Bad Guy Good Audio
Youtube Video Summary
Xenns Tea Pro lands as a confident mid-tier contender with a 2DD+6BA setup around $350–360, going head-to-head with sets like DaVinci, Estrella, and Dusk. Sub-bass has real grunt—808 drops, the 38 Hz hit on Big Boi’s “Kill Jill,” and early-2000s hip-hop cues slam with authority yet stay controlled. Electric-bass lines have clean pluck and release, avoiding mid-bass bloom, so the low end never muddies male or female vocals; the tuning plots close to a favored target without sounding sterile.
The midrange keeps vocals center and natural—no husky haze from mid-bass, no shout from upper-mids—and treble carries harmonics without tizzy edge, handling tricky voices (think Neil Young, Elton John, Jim Croce) with ease. Fans of the Moondrop Variations’ leaner, drier 3 kHz-pushed profile may find the Tea Pro richer and less “etched,” but that extra body reads as musical rather than bloated. Crucially, the BAs avoid that metallic tinge, giving cymbals and keys a clean, pleasing sheen.
On balance, this is the kind of tuning that competes directly with its peers—and depending on priorities, arguably beats them. With punchy sub-bass, stable mids, smooth but detailed top end, and zero fatiguing quirks, the Tea Pro sits between a firm “would buy” and a potential “shameless hype” slot—prime material for renewed top-five shortlists now that the market has cooled.
Bad Guy Good Audio original ranking
Bad Guy Good Audio Youtube ChannelXenns Tea Pro reviewed by Jays Audio
Youtube Video Summary
The Xenns Tea Pro stands as the most refined and well-rounded iteration of the Tea series to date, offering strong competition in the $300 IEM market. While it loses some of the unique "sauce" found in earlier models, it delivers significant improvements, particularly sounding like a "better Da Vinci" with its bass presentation. The Pro features a similar heaviness and thickness to the notes but adds more upper mids, treble extension, and overall better resolution. For roughly $60 more than the Da Vinci, the Pro offers upgraded drivers from Knowles, contributing to better timbre, a bump in technical performance, and equally good accessories.
Compared to the original Tea and Tea 2, the Pro emerges as the better all-rounder but lacks their distinct character. The original Tea remains superior for its highly addicting vocals, bite, and holographic staging, while the Pro offers more balanced, fuller, smoother, and more versatile vocals alongside superior bass in slam, texture, impact, resolution, and rumble due to its new dual dynamic drivers. Treble extension, overall resolution, and a more open stage also see noticeable improvements over both predecessors. Technical performance-wise, the Pro is highly competitive with other $200+ IEMs, offering better resolution, imaging, transience, attack, and separation than the Da Vinci, along with a more natural sound.
Positioned under $400, the Tea Pro fits as a balanced choice between neutral and exciting tunings. Against the clean, neutral Pilgrim or Dusk, the Pro provides a bassier, heavier, fuller sound with more forward vocals and better note weight. Compared to the exciting Estrella, the Pro is more balanced, thicker, and slams harder, while the Estrella offers more dynamic contrast and crispier treble. Versus the similarly priced Hype 4, the Pro delivers harder slam, deeper bass, and sharper vocals with more bite, though the Hype 4 is slightly quicker, smoother, and more balanced. Essentially, the Tea Pro excels as a versatile, resolving set with satisfying bass and well-tuned vocals, making it the best pick for most listeners despite losing some quirks of earlier models.
Jays Audio Youtube Channel
Xenns Tea Pro reviewed by Jaytiss
Youtube Video Summary
The Xenns Tea Pro impresses most with its exceptional build quality and aesthetics. The metallic shell feels substantial and premium in the ear, featuring a comfortable wing design and a nice metal nozzle. While slightly larger than its predecessors like the Tea and Tea2, the Pro's shell represents an upgrade in feel and technology, boasting a prettier faceplate. The included cable is thick, braided, and features a swappable termination (4.4mm or 3.5mm), contributing to an overall solid package that feels like a significant step up from previous models.
Sonically, the Tea Pro offers a bassy but clean signature with strong, impactful low end. However, it presents some key drawbacks: the bass can feel slightly boomy or distorted rather than pristine, and the overall presentation leans dark and rich. This comes at the expense of upper treble sparkle, air, and micro-details, resulting in a narrow soundstage and less impressive instrument separation than expected at its price point. While extremely pleasant and engaging for music listening, it feels slightly muffled and lacks the clarity and detail retrieval of many competitors.
When stacked against rivals like the Dunu Da Vinci, Kiwi Ears Quintet, EM10, DUNU DaVinci, Hype 4, or CCA CA4, the Tea Pro often falls short sonically. Competitors generally offer better air, treble extension, cleaner bass, or superior detail. Its own predecessor, the Tea2, is considered more neutral and relaxed. Consequently, while the Tea Pro is a contender with its fantastic build and fun tuning, it might be skippable for those prioritizing pure sound quality. It earns a recommendation for newcomers or those valuing premium construction, but audiophiles seeking the best sound may find better options elsewhere.
Jaytiss Youtube Channel
Xenns Tea Pro reviewed by Audionotions
Xenns Tea Pro reviewed by Tim Tuned
Youtube Video Summary
Xenns Tea Pro lands as an easy pick around $300 thanks to a natural, versatile tuning that blends tasteful fun with everyday usability. A gentle bass boost adds heft, slam, and definition without muddying the mids, while a touch of upper-mid lift keeps vocals clear—even on bass-heavy tracks—without tipping into thin or clinical territory. Treble stays smooth regardless of shallow or deep fit, supporting lifelike timbre and realistic decay that favors long, fatigue-free listening. Detail comes across as “natural detail” rather than etched; micro-nuances don’t jump out, but nothing feels missing or dulled either.
Against the Top Pro, bass through mids on the Top Pro can sound a bit tighter and more transparent, but its treble risks feeling overcooked and a touch “BA-like,” trading naturalness for extra sparkle and perceived detail. Tea Pro keeps the highs non-fatiguing and tonally convincing, making it the safer everyday choice. The “dream combo” would marry Top Pro’s bass-to-upper-mids with Tea Pro’s treble, but as it stands, Tea Pro remains a well-balanced, easy recommendation for its class—natural yet fun, clean vocals, and a bonus metal shell that seals the deal for all-day use.
Tim Tuned Youtube Channel
Xenns Tea Pro reviewed by Gizaudio Axel
Gizaudio Axel original ranking
Gizaudio Axel Youtube ChannelYanyin Canon II (more reviews)
Yanyin Canon II reviewed by Super* Review
Youtube Video Summary
At $380, the Yanyin Canon II lands in a competitive mid-tier alongside sets like the AFUL Performer 8 and Mangird T2. It’s a hybrid (1DD + 4BA) with a tidy, well-behaved cable and minimal accessories. The shells are medium-large, a bit chunky, with glittered faceplates whose typography/alignment may irk design sticklers; comfort is generally fine at a desk but fit stability can be mediocre during movement or sleep. Two recessed dip switches (tool required) mainly tweak bass by about ~1 dB—best treated as a “both up” vs “both down” toggle rather than four distinct tunings.
Tonally, Canon II reads as neutral-leaning and relaxed: modest upper-mids, a touch dark up top yet still well extended, and a bass shelf that carries some mid-bass “stank” beyond pure sub-bass emphasis. The result is natural timbre with an overall dry presentation—bass has weight without lingering rumble. Technicalities are solid but not showy; imaging/separation is the weak link, skewing more cohesive than dissected, and sitting a bit behind what would be hoped for at this price.
Versus the AFUL Performer 8, Canon II is the warmer, fuller, slightly darker take with more bass presence, while P8 runs brighter/leaner and stages/separates better. If the brief is “neutral with extra bass body” and pleasing timbre, Canon II ticks the box; if headstage and pinpoint placement lead the priorities, P8 makes more sense. Final verdict: a solid 4/5, with tuning versatility and tonality as the draws, and imaging as the compromise.
Super* Review original ranking
Super* Review Youtube ChannelYanyin Canon II reviewed by Yifang
Xenns Tea Pro Details
Driver Configuration: 2DD+6BA
Tuning Type: Neutral, Warm
Brand: XENNS Top XENNS IEMs
Price (Msrp): $359
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Yanyin Canon II Details
Driver Configuration: 1DD+4BA
Tuning Type: Neutral with Bass Boost, Warm
Brand: Yanyin Top Yanyin IEMs
Price (Msrp): $379
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Xenns Tea Pro User Review Score
Average User Scores
Average User Score:
Based on 1 user reviews
8Very Positive
Yanyin Canon II User Review Score
Average User Scores
Average User Score: n/a
Based on 0 user reviews
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Xenns Tea Pro Gaming Score
Gaming Score & Grade
- The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.
Gaming Score
8Gaming Grade
A+Yanyin Canon II 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-Xenns Tea Pro Scorings
Average Technical & Tuning Grades
Average Tunign Grade
A-- Tuning lands in a pleasing sweet spot with mostly coherent frequency integration. Tonality stays consistent from track to track.
Average Technical Grade
A-- The presentation feels orderly, balancing workable detail retrieval with acceptable imaging cues. It keeps momentum without smearing transients.
Yanyin Canon II Scorings
Average Technical & Tuning Grades
Average Tunign Grade
A- Tuning lands in a pleasing sweet spot with mostly coherent frequency integration. Tonality stays consistent from track to track.
Average Technical Grade
B+- An honest, middle-of-the-road performance preserves structure without chasing micro-detail. It's respectable for everyday listening sessions.
Xenns Tea Pro User Reviews
Share your experience and build your personal ranking list.
You need to be signed in to write your own reviewA great IEM that punches above its price with strong technical ability and tonal balance.
Pros
Balanced and engaging signature with excellent imaging and bass texture.Cons
Treble may be slightly fatiguing to sensitive ears.Yanyin Canon II User Reviews
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