Logitech G733 Lightspeed Wireless Gaming Headset
A featherweight 278g wireless headset with a genuinely good mic and 29-hour battery, built for long workdays and gaming sessions alike.
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What we like
- Extremely lightweight at 278g — easy to wear all day
- Blue VO!CE mic presets make calls sound broadcast-clean
- 29-hour battery handles a full workweek between charges
- Suspension headband distributes weight evenly with no hot spots
Could be better
- Bass is lighter than competing gaming headsets
- Mic is non-detachable, which looks odd on video calls
- RGB lighting drains battery noticeably when enabled
Full Review
The G733 is marketed as a gaming headset, but it has quietly become one of the better work-from-home options under $100. At 278g, it’s nearly 100g lighter than most competing wireless cans, and that weight difference shows up in how your neck feels after a four-hour call marathon.
Comfort That Actually Lasts
The suspension headband is the star. Instead of a padded arch pressing down on your skull, an elastic strap floats the headset on your head. There’s no adjustment slider — the strap flexes to fit — and it works surprisingly well across head sizes. The memory foam earcups seal without clamping.
After eight hours of meetings, I forgot I was wearing it. That’s rare. Most gaming headsets either crush your ears or leak sound into the room.
The Mic Is the Sleeper Feature
The boom mic is small and looks cheap, but plug the headset into G HUB and enable a Blue VO!CE preset and your voice sounds dramatically better than any other headset in this price range. The “Clear Broadcast 2” preset adds warmth and noise suppression that makes you sound like you’re on a podcast instead of a Zoom call.
If call quality matters — and on remote teams it does — this alone justifies the price.
Battery and Range
Logitech rates the battery at 29 hours with RGB off, and that’s honest. With lighting cranked, expect closer to 20. The 2.4GHz LIGHTSPEED receiver is rock-solid — no Bluetooth stutter, no pairing drama — but it does occupy a USB port and can’t pair to a phone.
If you want Bluetooth versatility, the Jabra Evolve2 55 is a better fit. If you want pure audio quality for music, the Sony WH-1000XM5 wins. The G733 sits in the middle: great mic, great comfort, good-enough sound.
Who Should Buy This
Remote workers who live in video calls and want a lightweight headset with a standout microphone. It’s also a solid pick if you split time between work and evening gaming — it does both without compromise. Skip it if you need Bluetooth, want deep bass for music, or need a dressier look for on-camera meetings.