ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia VS Simgot ET142

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

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ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia and Simgot ET142 use 2DD BA and 1Planar+1BC driver setups respectively. ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia costs $200 while Simgot ET142 costs $220. Simgot ET142 is $20 more expensive. Simgot ET142 holds a decisive 1-point edge in reviewer scores (6.5 vs 7.5). Simgot ET142 carries a user score of 7.3. Simgot ET142 has slightly better bass with a 0.4-point edge, Simgot ET142 has significantly better mids with a 1.3-point edge and Simgot ET142 has significantly better treble with a 2.6-point edge.

Insights

Metric ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia Simgot ET142
Bass 7 7.4
Mids 6.5 7.8
Treble 5 7.6
Details 6.5 7.6
Soundstage 5 7.5
Dynamics 5 7.5
Tonality 6.8 7.7
Technicalities 5.7 7.8

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia Aggregated Review Score

Average Reviewer Scores

Average Reviewer Score:

6.5

Cautiously Favorable


Simgot ET142 Aggregated Review Score

Average Reviewer Scores

Average Reviewer Score:

7.5

Strongly Favorable


Reviews Comparison

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia reviewed by Jays Audio

Jays Audio 7 Reviewer Score
A+ Tuning
A- Tech
Niche/high volume set. Great scaling, warm, bassy, thick, comforting listen. A mini MEGA5EST Bass. Initmate and immersive experience. Not the most technical for the price, and vocals can be a bit too husky.

Jays Audio original ranking

Jays Audio Youtube Channel
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Price: $199

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Simgot ET142 reviewed by Jays Audio

Jays Audio 7 Reviewer Score
A Tuning
A+ Tech
Lots of variety with nozzles.Tames down 2K, keeps treble extension, basically a Timeless 2 with better fit and more detail with blue nozzle.
Youtube Video Summary

SIMGOT’s ET142 pairs a planar driver with a PZT, delivering a bright-leaning, lively all-rounder that feels like a more mature, slightly more detailed take on the original S12 tonality. Treble is the surprise: it carries bite and air without the usual planar “sizzle”, landing closer to a well-implemented PZT sheen. Micro-nuance on cymbal work is improved, vocals are open, and technical performance is among the best heard from planars in this bracket. The 2 kHz region can read a touch shy, while overall treble sits above Harman, so expect sparkle and energy rather than warmth.

Volume and fit matter. At mid levels (~60–65 dB) the ET142 sounds engaging and airy; push past ~70–75 dB and the upper energy can turn fatiguing, with forward vocals and sharper highs on busy tracks. Tip choice is critical: treble-boosting tips can be too much, whereas wide-bore, smoother tips (e.g., “Senai Wide”) keep the top end in check. Both included nozzles measure and sound essentially the same—an opportunity missed for a second, tamer tuning. Genre-wise, rock, indie and slower pop benefit from the speed and air; dense electronic can edge bright, while K-/J-pop stays bouncy at moderate volume.

Bass is quick, punchy and clean with tight decay and excellent separation—don’t expect DD-level rumble or lingering reverb, but do expect balance and definition. Versus safer, more relaxed tunings (S8/S15/S12 2024), the ET142 is the more exciting pick; against neutral all-rounders (e.g., “Pilgrim”), it trades smoothness for air and sparkle; compared to sets like “Dusk,” it’s livelier with less treble fizzle but a more forward top end. At around $200, build is excellent (metal shells, braided cable) and the value strong—competing with some $300–$400 options. In short: choose ET142 for a bright, technical, energetic listen; skip it if a laid-back or dark tilt is the goal.


Jays Audio original ranking

Jays Audio Youtube Channel
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Price: $219.99

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ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia reviewed by Audio Amigo

Audio Amigo 6 * score rescaled + normalized
Baby Mega5Bass or KiwiEars Punch. Vocals are a little recessed and affected, but the treble does well to balance out the signature overall. Probably the best Basshead set at or under $200.

Audio Amigo original ranking

Audio Amigo Youtube Channel

Simgot ET142 reviewed by Audio Amigo

Audio Amigo 8.5 * score rescaled + normalized
A 3-in-1 IEM. It can sound like an S12, S12 Pro, or S08 depending on what nozzles you're using. Great acessories and build quality. Stellar Sound with all nozzles
Youtube Video Summary

The Simgot ET142 is a $220 planar–piezo hybrid that arrives like a mini system: full-metal shells, the chunky but well-behaved LC7 modular cable (3.5/4.4 included), a sturdy magnetic case, and four tuning nozzles (titanium stock, gold, short black foam, short red foam). Build is solid and venting prevents pressure issues; finish is a fingerprint magnet and the shell+cable combo is heavy, comfortable for average ears but failing the “tiny ears” test in stock form. Accessory spread is excellent at the price, with multiple tip sets and spare O-rings/foams rounding out a thoughtful package.

Sonically, this is textbook planar bass: clean sub-bass rumble with punchy, textured mid-bass that doesn’t bleed. The midrange stays clear and unmasked, presenting busy mixes with ease, while vocal presence shifts with nozzle choice (short nozzles push fundamentals slightly forward). Treble is where the nozzles matter most: short red = relaxed and smooth; short black = balanced sparkle; titanium/gold = vivid, edging toward “hot” for treble-sensitive listeners. Technical chops impress—crisp microdetail from the PZT without harshness, precise imaging, strong separation, and a notably 3D soundstage. It’s also very easy to drive, playing happily from modest sources.

Think of ET142 as a three-in-one planar: titanium delivers a bright, energetic V-shape (S12/“classic planar” territory), short black dials it to a balanced, less aggressive profile (S12 Pro/2024 vibe), and short red shifts into the modern warm planar lane (akin to S15/S08). Compared with other nozzle-swap sets (e.g., Timeless 2), ET142 offers a wider tuning range up top, trading fine micro-timbre tweaks for genuinely distinct signatures. Caveats: none of the nozzles are truly neutral and the low end stays boosted, so lean-bass seekers should look elsewhere; the weight may be a deal-breaker for small ears. For anyone wanting a versatile planar that can swing from sparkly and fun to warm and relaxing with a quick nozzle swap, this earns a confident “you should buy this” recommendation on value and flexibility alone.


Audio Amigo original ranking

Audio Amigo Youtube Channel

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia reviewed by Fresh Reviews

Fresh Reviews 5.5* * The score of this reviewer influences only the Gaming Score
C+ Apex, B to B- COD, B Val
Youtube Video Summary

Ziigaat’s 2024 lineup lands three distinct flavors: the R (1DD+4BA), Arcadia (1DD+2BA), and Odyssey (1DD+3BA)—all sharing the same case, tips, and cable, but with very different tunings and striking faceplates. Pricing lives in the approachable range (roughly $200–$250), and the shells are well-built 3D-printed resin. The Odyssey’s nozzle appears slightly wider than the R’s, and its cloudy pink/silver faceplate looks clean and premium without the flashiness of Arcadia’s green/yellow sparkle.

For competitive play, title-by-title differences matter. In Valorant, Arcadia’s extra warmth and bass impact feel immersive but a touch boomy/bloomy under heavy ability spam—solid, around a B. The R and Odyssey perform on par with high marks; the R’s 1–3 kHz lift sharpens clarity and verticality, while Odyssey is more neutral and less bright. In Apex Legends, Arcadia struggles as bass bloom masks micro-cues (B–/C+). Odyssey delivers great separation/layering with slightly softer overhead cues (B+/B), and handles gunfire more comfortably than the R. In CS2, Odyssey takes the lead for its imaging, depth perception, and non-fatiguing balance; in Warzone, the order shifts to R > Arcadia > Odyssey, with Arcadia’s warmth helping vertical reads and impact.

As a music set, the Odyssey is a standout: potent, tight bass with clean transients, balanced mids that aren’t smothered, and a clean, non-sibilant treble that avoids fatigue while letting micro-detail through. It lands as a favorite in its price bracket—an easy recommendation for listeners who want a neutral-leaning all-rounder that still punches hard, splits cues well, and won’t scorch ears with gunfire or treble glare.


Fresh Reviews original ranking

Fresh Reviews Youtube Channel

Simgot ET142 reviewed by Fresh Reviews

Fresh Reviews 6.5* * The score of this reviewer influences only the Gaming Score
Border B
Youtube Video Summary

Build & accessories: ET142 arrives with an all-metal chassis, a tidy two-pin cable with interchangeable termination, and swappable nozzles (blue default vs. gold). The blue nozzle proves smoother, as the gold adds extra 2–3 kHz energy that can edge into shout. Ergonomics are compact, vented, and well-finished, though not as feather-light as some resin competitors.

Tuning & technicals: The hybrid architecture (planar plus bone-conduction) projects an expansive, airy stage with clean separation and layering. However, that upper-mid peak can make gunfire and busy mixes feel a bit spicy, leading to a “deer-in-headlights” sensation during chaotic moments. Tonally it’s clear and detailed, but the extra air sometimes pushes nearfield cues slightly forward in the stage instead of delivering immediate urgency.

Gaming performance: Imaging and verticality are solid and footstep cues are intelligible, placing ET142 in a B+ to B range for competitive play. Against a warmer rival with stronger low-end presence, ET142 is less fatiguing than the gold-nozzle setup but still brighter than ideal for Apex/Valorant chaos; the rival’s bass weighting keeps gunfire tamed and localization snappier. Overall, ET142 is good for gaming with strong separation and stage, best for players who value clarity and air over maximum urgency.


Fresh Reviews original ranking

Fresh Reviews Youtube Channel

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia (more reviews)

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia reviewed by Bad Guy Good Audio

Bad Guy Good Audio 7.9 Reviewer Score
A+ Tuning
A- Tech
check links for more info:

Bad Guy Good Audio original ranking

Bad Guy Good Audio Youtube Channel
Bass: A- Mids: A+ Treble: A-

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia reviewed by Jaytiss

Jaytiss 5.3 Reviewer Score
C- Tuning
D Tech
I don't get it, very dark. Lifeless.

Jaytiss original ranking

Jaytiss Youtube Channel
Mids: C+ Treble: D Dynamics: C+ Soundstage: C+

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia reviewed by Head-Fi.org

Head-Fi.org 6.5 * score rescaled + normalized
6 community members have rated the ZiiGaat x HBB: Arcadia at an average of 3.5/5 on Head-Fi. Overall sentiment: Generally Favorable.

URL to full Review

Head-Fi.org original ranking

Simgot ET142 (more reviews)

Simgot ET142 reviewed by Paul Wasabii

Paul Wasabii 7.7 * Score computed by IEMRanking.com
A Tuning
A Tech
Flexible nozzle system gives smoother treble options and near-reference planar tuning. Superb shell and LC7 modular cable. Outstanding build and LC7 modular cable with flexible nozzle and foam system that caters to treble-sensitive listeners. Less resolution and top-end extension than S12 2024, and the gold or blue nozzles can be too bright for many.
Youtube Video Summary

SIMGOT ET142 pairs a polished CNC metal shell with a comfortable ergonomic fit and the LC7 modular cable including 3.5 mm and 4.4 mm plugs plus a case. Four interchangeable nozzles are provided, with revised geometry in production rather than just foam stuffing, and the foam can be added or removed for fine-tuning. Build and accessories feel genuinely premium for the segment.

The original gold/blue nozzles target a brighter, analytical upper range; the new black sits in the middle with a smoother treble line, and red is the most restrictive and warmest. With black, ET142 tracks close to Letshuoer S12 2024 in balance but remains more relaxed up top with slightly less resolve; with red, the tonality leans toward a clean, dynamic-driver style that edges out Timeless 2's Gold Leaf for ease of listening. Swapping foam in or out yields small but useful shifts without breaking the core signature.

As a package, this set prioritizes tuning flexibility and ease of listening over chasing maximum air and extension. S12 2024 stays the single-planar reference for sheer end-to-end resolution, but ET142 answers with a best-in-class shell and cable and friendlier options for treble-sensitive ears. For those wanting planar technicalities with a smoother top end, the black and red nozzles form a compelling, configurable choice.

Bass: A- Mids: A Treble: A Details: A

Paul Wasabii original ranking

Paul Wasabii Youtube Channel

Simgot ET142 reviewed by Z-Reviews

Z-Reviews 6.8 * score rescaled + normalized
Youtube Video Summary

SIMGOT ET142 comes across as a sleek, chrome-heavy hybrid with a planar + PZT setup, dressed in CNC’d stainless shells and a surprisingly thick premium cable, plus a magnetic case and swappable 4.4/3.5 plug. Two tuning nozzles are included; differences are subtle, but the gold nozzles give a warmer, more relaxed balance versus the blued “airier” set. At a listed ~$220, the build and accessories feel upscale, though that cable is borderline overkill for an IEM.

On power, the ET142’s 14 Ω load behaves better with a more linear solid-state source (e.g., JDS Labs Element) than with tubes; an impedance adapter can tame noise. The tuning reads smooth, non-aggressive, with bass present but not the star; sub-bass “slam” isn’t the focus, yet vocals and staging are clean and pleasing. Treble with the gold nozzles stays polite, while the blued set adds some sparkle without turning harsh.

The special sauce is the imaging: sound feels “inside” and slightly behind the head, creating a quirky but engaging sense of placement that should be excellent for gaming. Overall it fits neatly among planar hybrids at this price—refined, smooth, and easy to enjoy rather than a fireworks show—earning a straightforward recommendation, especially for SIMGOT fans who value comfort, build, and that distinctive spatial presentation over brute-force bass.


Z-Reviews original ranking

Z-Reviews Youtube Channel

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia User Review Score

Average User Scores

Average User Score: n/a

Based on 0 user reviews

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Simgot ET142 User Review Score

Average User Scores

Average User Score:

Based on 1 user reviews

7.3

Generally Favorable

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia Gaming Score

Gaming Score & Grade

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

Gaming Score

6

Gaming Grade

B

Simgot ET142 Gaming Score

Gaming Score & Grade

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

Gaming Score

8.1

Gaming Grade

A+

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia Scorings

Average Technical & Tuning Grades

Average Tunign Grade

B+
  • It sounds pleasant overall, with some uneven spots that hint at room for refinement. Vocals remain pleasant despite the imperfections.

Average Technical Grade

B-
  • It offers a competent showing, maintaining cohesion on straightforward arrangements. Complex passages start to challenge it, but never derail the show.
Bass A-
Bass is strong and well-defined, delivering slam with admirable control. Electronic drops hit with authority.
Mids B+
The mids are articulate and well-balanced, lending body to instruments. Instrument layering remains stable.
Treble C+
Expect a polite treble presentation that balances presence with restraint. Percussion carries a pleasant sparkle.
Dynamics C+
Dynamics feel competent, bringing energy without the finest detail. It carries energy without sounding aggressive.
Soundstage C+
The image breathes a little, spacing instruments laterally while sketching a light sense of distance. Separation improves with cleaner recordings.
Gaming B
Decent spatial awareness for fundamental positioning. Creates satisfying atmosphere in story-driven games while handling basic directional cues.

Simgot ET142 Scorings

Average Technical & Tuning Grades

Average Tunign Grade

A
  • Tuning feels well executed, keeping a natural flow across the spectrum. Switching genres feels seamless.

Average Technical Grade

A
  • The balance of resolution and space feels assured, keeping complex passages coherent. Layering is convincing on most studio mixes.
Bass A-
You get robust low-end authority that remains disciplined and textured. Layering stays intact despite the weight.
Mids A
Expect lifelike vocals and instruments with impressive nuance and realism. You can easily follow harmonies and backups.
Treble A
The treble is exquisitely tuned, combining crystal detail with relaxed delivery. Micro-details emerge effortlessly.
Details A
Excellent detail retrieval that resolves intricacies without tipping into clinical territory. Tiny nuances jump out effortlessly.
Gaming A+
Reliable positional tracking with good environmental awareness. Maintains clarity during busy scenes while conveying atmospheric depth. Exceptional value for gaming at this price point.

ZIIGAAT x HBB Arcadia User Reviews

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Simgot ET142 User Reviews

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Z Zale
7.3

The Simgot ET142 delivers a smooth and natural sound signature with strong mids but lacks impact in the bass region.

Tuning: A Tech: A- Bass: B+ Mids: A Treble: A- Dynamics: A- Soundstage: B+ Details: A- Imaging: A-
Pros
Clear and detailed mids with good instrument separation; solid build quality and comfortable fit.
Cons
Bass can feel a bit light for bassheads; soundstage is average and not very wide.

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