Summary
Based on 11 reviews, the 7th Acoustics Supernova is standing out as a favorite among reviewers, who note that it elevates everyday playlists.
Average Reviewer Scores
Average Reviewer Score:
7.9Strongly Favorable
Average User Scores
Average User Score: n/a
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Gaming Score & Grade
- The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.
Gaming Score
6.7Gaming Grade
B+7th Acoustics Supernova Details
Driver Configuration: 6BA
Tuning Type: Neutral with Bass Boost
Price (Msrp): $850
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Reviews
Reviewed by: Super* Review
Youtube Video Summary
Hand-built in Indonesia with customizable abalone faceplates, Supernova feels like a boutique step up in value: a handsome, slightly medium-large shell, stable fit, strong isolation, and a tasteful, beefy copper cable. The only nit: a smooth nozzle with no tip notch means soft tips can slip. Overall execution—build, comfort, and the personal order-to-chat experience—delivers a “next level” vibe uncommon around $750.
Tonally, this is a clean, body-intact neutral with a touch of sub-bass lift and a tasteful push in the lower treble. Midrange is the star—full, natural, and richly timbred without the hollow lower-mid dip of leaner targets. Treble is well-extended, linear, and textured, giving transients snap without tipping into sibilance. Technicals impress: tight bass attack, clear separation, precise imaging, and strong micro-contrast that keeps dense mixes like The Cure’s “Disintegration” organized and alive. Caveats are mild: listeners sensitive to lower-treble energy should note its presence, and the low end—while punchy—still reads as BA bass with less sub-bass “flutter” than a dynamic driver.
Against peers, Supernova blends the fuller midrange charm of Moondrop Blessing 2 with the technical grace of Moondrop S8, yet sounds more natural than either. Symphonium Meteor offers bigger bass and a lush stage but trails in separation and mid texture; S8 feels smoother with even stronger 3D imaging but less body. Taken together, Supernova’s tuning, texture, and boutique fit/finish make a compelling all-rounder—and an easy five-star recommendation, especially for those who value lifelike mids and crisp, controlled sparkle over maximal slam.
Super* Review original ranking
Super* Review Youtube ChannelReviewed by: Jaytiss
Youtube Video Summary
Custom-built shells and faceplates make Supernova feel special from the start, and the ergonomics seal the deal: a light, durable shell, super comfortable fit and a supple, well-textured stock cable. The tonality stays open, clean and free of sibilance, with imaging that snaps into place both horizontally and vertically. Detail retrieval in busy scenes is immaculate, making it superb for long gaming sessions—not to farm K/D ratios, but to elevate the overall experience as in-game micro-details sparkle. Tip rolling works well (SpinFit, Divinus, Latex H70), though the included tips are decent; the clamshell case is nice, if a bit annoying to twist shut.
Versus peers, Supernova shows almost perfect tuning with exceedingly strong technicals and a touch of juicy, lush timbre. Against Night Oblivion Butastur, the overall tone and bass texture on Supernova are a hair better, while Butastur gets you 95–98% of the way for less and shines for classical and pop. Compared with Monarch Mk III, the FR curves are scarily close (within a couple dB), yet Supernova’s treble refinement and stage feel a tad more convincing, even if Monarch brings different technical strengths. Net takeaway: a holographic, genre-agnostic performer that’s easy to recommend; the only real caveat is the long wait time to get one, and the bass could use a touch more authority.
Jaytiss Youtube Channel
Reviewed by: Yifang
Reviewed by: Audionotions
Reviewed by: Shuwa-T
Reviewed by: Nymz
Reviewed by: Jays Audio
Youtube Video Summary
Supernova’s calling card is its treble: extended, butter-smooth, and startlingly even. No peaks, no weird dips, no BA glare—just airy shimmer with spot-on decay that stays stable at any volume. It rivals the best under $1K and even brushes the Symphonium Helios (OG) for finesse, yet remains less bright and more relaxed. Despite being all-BA, there’s no BA timbre. Dynamics feel controlled rather than fiery—big chorus swings (think “Run Away With Me”) are rendered cohesively without harshness, trading adrenaline for refinement.
The low end is clean, tight, and well-separated—not a sub-bass sledgehammer. Sets with DDs like Hype 2, EJ07M, or Monarch dig deeper and rumble harder, but Supernova’s bass gives body without smearing. Vocals sit mid-forward but not shouty, a hair warm from mid-bass/1.5k lift; extension around ~3k could use a touch more presence for extra “head voice,” yet the overall presentation remains natural and unfatiguing and scales beautifully with volume. Versus Moondrop S8, Supernova trades a bit of the S8’s clinical separation for fuller mid-bass weight and more textured, even treble; the S8 keeps a leaner, clearer stage and more vocal gain.
Comparisons sharpen its profile: against EJ07 (OG/KL), EJ07 offers darker tonality and stronger sub-bass immersion, while Supernova is airier and smoother up top. ThieAudio Monarch series: Mk1 has snappier vocal clarity, Mk3 hits harder with bass texture/slam, but Supernova wins on treble quality and macro-smoothness. Neon Pro can feel more engaging at mid volumes with firmer low-end and crisper imaging, whereas Supernova shines when cranked, remaining composed and immersive. Net take: an “endgame”-leaning, balanced all-rounder for those wanting refinement over fireworks—genre-agnostic, not a treble-head blaster or bass cannon, and short on “special sauce” theatrics, yet consistently excellent where it counts. Availability is the real enemy; production scarcity makes it hard to snag.
Jays Audio Youtube Channel
Reviewed by: Precogvision
Precogvision Youtube Channel
Reviewed by: Smirk Audio
Reviewed by: Z-Reviews
Youtube Video Summary
7th Acoustic Supernova brings a 6BA setup at around $850, dressed in pretty shells but a bit bulgy for the fit. Packaging quirks and micro-print gripes aside, the included Versus Audio cable (permanent 4.4) looks flashy and feels premium. Tip rolling from Dunu SS to Render shifts the presentation, but the core signature stays smooth to a fault—vocals sit a touch further back, treble hints at a lift then fades with different tips, and only the occasional techno track shows bass that carries well. It’s the kind of tuning that’s impeccably polite yet tip-dependent and rarely grabs attention.
Across sources—from a warmer Alpha Pro chain to other amps—the Supernova keeps a straight face: competent, clean, and ultimately boring for the price. Against known yardsticks (neutral “glass-of-water” sets, bass-heavy options, or value champs like Kiwi’s Astrals), the Supernova doesn’t carve a clear identity; it’s smooth without the thrill. Final takeaway: lovely looks, nice cable, but the sound feels meh at this tier—barely meeting the bar where musical moments should pop. On the value meter, the cable helps, the tuning doesn’t; there’s been better—and for less.
Z-Reviews Youtube Channel
Reviewed by: Head-Fi.org
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Compare 7th Acoustics Supernova to popular alternatives
VS
| IEM | alt. Score |
|---|---|
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. Letshuoer Mystic 8
Letshuoer Mystic 8 offers better details, treble and imaging.
|
8.4 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. Campfire Audio Alien Brain
Campfire Audio Alien Brain offers better dynamics, bass and details.
|
8.3 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. Thieaudio Monarch MK3
Thieaudio Monarch MK3 offers better details, dynamics and bass.
|
8.2 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. Softears RSV MK II
Softears RSV MK II offers better details, bass and dynamics.
|
8.1 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. Thieaudio Monarch Mk2
Thieaudio Monarch Mk2 offers better details.
|
8.1 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. Thieaudio Hype 10
Thieaudio Hype 10 offers better bass, details and dynamics.
|
8 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. EPZ 530
EPZ 530 offers better dynamics.
|
8 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. Thieaudio Origin
Thieaudio Origin offers better dynamics and bass.
|
7.9 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. ORIVETI OH700VB
Similar overall performance.
|
7.9 |
|
7th Acoustics Supernova vs. Aful Cantor
Aful Cantor offers better details, bass and treble.
|
7.7 |
Average Technical & Tuning Grades
Average Tunign Grade
A+- You hear a mature integration of lows, mids, and highs that keeps music lifelike. Small tuning tweaks showcase expert restraint.
Average Technical Grade
A- Overall technical control is strong, presenting instruments with clarity and sensible staging. Textures are portrayed with satisfying clarity.
User Reviews
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