Symphonium Titan - Reviews & Ratings

4 Reviews (A Tier | 7.3/10)

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Summary

Based on 4 reviews, the Symphonium Titan is standing out as a favorite among reviewers, who note that it elevates everyday playlists.

Average Reviewer Scores

Average Reviewer Score:

7.3

Generally 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

6.8

Gaming Grade

B+

Reviews

Reviewed by: Yifang

Yifang 8 Reviewer Score
A+ Tuning
A+ Tech

Reviewed by: Jays Audio

Jays Audio 7.5 Reviewer Score
S- Tuning
A+ Tech
Most balanced bass set I've heard so far without sacrificing the fun/texture/impact in the low-end. Open staging, full sounding, deep sub-bass, vocals aren't buried either. No big peaky treble, good extension. No real issues aside from the price maybe. A very unique bass experience since usually the low-end overtakes the other fr, but with the Titan you can hear everything while having that impactful/authoritative bass.
Youtube Video Summary

Symphonium Titan delivers a bass-centric tuning that keeps its house in order. The mid-bass is tactile and textured with satisfying slam, while the sub-bass reaches deep, rumbly, and clean. Crucially, vocals remain clear and the treble is well-extended without harsh peaks; there’s a small 5–8 kHz rise that adds excitement and “snap,” yet overall control prevents bleed into the mids. The stage feels big and open, and the set avoids excessive warmth, making it a genuinely balanced bassy IEM.

There is a caveat: that 5–8 kHz lift can come off a bit sharp on forward-snare or energetic K/J-pop and hip-hop tracks, so the Titan shines best at mid volume rather than cranking it. Even so, it stays smoother than options like Maestro/Scarlet Minis, offering better extension and less fatigue while keeping the fun. Scaling is above average, and the overall presentation remains engaging and authoritative.

In comparisons, Titan reads as a direct upgrade to Monarch Minis (bigger stage, less fatiguing), more balanced than Scarlet Minis (which chase sheer slam), and a far better value play than Grand Maestro or EVOs for low-end lovers, thanks to cleaner bass and tamer upper mids. For warmer, smoother needs, DUNU’s take is fuller but not as rumble-clean or open. Under $1,000, Titan sets a new benchmark for bass-heads who still want clarity, air, and control.


Jays Audio original ranking

Jays Audio Youtube Channel

Reviewed by: Smirk Audio

Smirk Audio 7.3 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-

Reviewed by: Z-Reviews

Z-Reviews 6.5 * score rescaled + normalized
Youtube Video Summary

Symphonium Titan shows up with a big box, a blue theme, and a cable that feels too soft for a $1,000 set, plus a hefty metal case that could double as a tiny sarcophagus. The shell styling reads plain, almost like a stickered faceplate, and the accessory pile is fine-but-forgettable. The headline spec, though, is the eyebrow-raising 3Ω impedance—a choice that can stress amps, make cable impedance matter far more than it should, and generally feels needlessly risky when series/parallel options and crossover tweaks exist. Swapping cables doesn’t fundamentally rescue it; the blue stock wire is comfy but uninspiring in hand, and tip-rolling doesn’t unlock anything magical.

Sonically, Titan delivers a tidy, punchy kick drum and then coasts. It comes across as an all-BA tuning that’s overly polite: narrow soundstage, very neutral demeanor, vocals that sedate rather than seduce, and detail that never reaches “crystalline.” The sensation is like a go-kart with a limiter—foot down, waiting for excitement that never arrives—leaving the set short on engagement or a defining “thing” that justifies the price. Across amps—tube pre, solid-state, speaker-ish outputs—the character stays the same: controlled bass thump surrounded by music that refuses to wake up. In a world where a $21 budget set can spark a grin, Titan’s ultra-safe tuning and quirk make it more “why?” than “wow.”


Z-Reviews original ranking

Z-Reviews Youtube Channel

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Compare Symphonium Titan to popular alternatives

Take this comparison with a grain of salt—we don't have enough Symphonium Titan reviews saved yet to provide an unbiased result.
Compare two IEMs side by side
Name

VS

Name
IEM alt. Score
Symphonium Titan vs. ThieAudio Monarch MK4
ThieAudio Monarch MK4 offers better treble, details and mids.
8.5
Symphonium Titan vs. Letshuoer Mystic 8
Letshuoer Mystic 8 offers better treble, details and imaging.
8.4
Symphonium Titan vs. Campfire Audio Alien Brain
Campfire Audio Alien Brain offers better treble and dynamics.
8.3
Symphonium Titan vs. Thieaudio Monarch MK3
Thieaudio Monarch MK3 offers better treble, details and imaging.
8.2
Symphonium Titan vs. 64 Audio U4S
64 Audio U4S offers better imaging, mids and details.
8.1
Symphonium Titan vs. Thieaudio Monarch Mk2
Thieaudio Monarch Mk2 offers better mids, details and treble.
8.1
Symphonium Titan vs. Thieaudio Hype 10
Thieaudio Hype 10 offers better treble, imaging and mids.
8
Symphonium Titan vs. Symphonium Helios SE
Symphonium Helios SE offers better treble, details and mids.
8
Symphonium Titan vs. Symphonium Helios
Symphonium Helios offers better treble, details and imaging.
8
Symphonium Titan vs. Thieaudio Origin
Thieaudio Origin offers better dynamics, bass and mids.
7.9
Best IEMs from $600 - $1,000

Average Technical & Tuning Grades

Average Tunign Grade

A+
  • It delivers a coherent, natural timbre that remains captivating across genres. Acoustic instruments sound lifelike and textured.

Average Technical Grade

A
  • You get a well-rounded technical package that keeps separation, detail, and staging in harmony. It's a solid middle ground between fun and fidelity.
Bass A+
You hear powerful yet disciplined low-end slam that extends effortlessly. It marries sub-bass depth with great texture.
Mids A
The mids sound lush and articulate, capturing emotion effortlessly. Strings and keys shimmer with realism.
Treble A-
The treble is exquisitely tuned, combining crystal detail with relaxed delivery. Micro-details emerge effortlessly.
Dynamics A
The system snaps into action with precision, highlighting every swell. Recordings feel energetic and alive.
Details A-
Excellent detail retrieval that resolves intricacies without tipping into clinical territory. Tiny nuances jump out effortlessly.
Imaging A-
Spatial cues respond immediately, reflecting every movement in the mix. Spatial cues respond instantly to the mix.
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

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