Razer BlackShark V3 Pro ANC Niko Edition Drops to $200, Adding ANC and Multipoint to the Esports Headset Standard
Razer BlackShark V3 Pro ANC Niko Edition: 2.4GHz + Bluetooth multipoint, active noise cancellation, 70-hour battery, detachable mic, Niko esports tribute. $200 sale.

What it is
The Razer BlackShark V3 Pro ANC Niko Edition is a limited-run colorway of Razer's 2026 flagship esports-gaming headset, paired with pro CS2 player Nikola "NiKo" Kovač's signature branding. The underlying BlackShark V3 Pro ANC is Razer's updated take on the BlackShark line with active noise cancellation, dual-mode wireless (2.4 GHz Razer HyperSpeed + Bluetooth 5.3 with multipoint), and THX Spatial Audio. Core specs: 50 mm TriForce Titanium drivers, hybrid ANC with dual feedforward and feedback microphones, 70-hour battery life with ANC off (50 hours ANC on), detachable HyperClear Supercardioid microphone with flip-to-mute, cooling-fabric memory foam ear cushions, 320 g weight, multipoint Bluetooth for parallel PC + phone connection, PS5 and PC compatible (Xbox requires wired 3.5 mm), and integrated volume dial plus game/chat mixer on the left earcup.
Pricing: $200 at Amazon (current sale; Razer MSRP $250). 9to5toys flagged this as an Amazon low for the Niko colorway.
What's interesting
ANC in an esports-focused headset is the meaningful spec bump. Prior BlackShark V-series headsets had excellent passive isolation but no electronic cancellation; the V3 Pro ANC adds a dual-mic hybrid system that meaningfully reduces tournament-environment crowd noise, fan hum from gaming PCs, and AC rumble in cafes or co-working gaming setups. RTINGS' tests measured 18-24 dB of active reduction across the 50-500 Hz range, competitive with consumer-grade ANC headphones like Sony WH-1000XM5.
70-hour battery (ANC off) is category-leading. The Logitech G Pro X 2 Lightspeed tops out at 50 hours with no ANC; the SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless manages 22 hours with hot-swap batteries. For travel-heavy esports pros or streamers who run 12+ hours a day, Razer's runtime is a productivity asset.
Multipoint Bluetooth plus HyperSpeed 2.4 GHz means you can be in a competitive match on PC while a phone call comes through the same headset. Prior BlackShark models required un-pairing the PC dongle to switch to phone audio. For solo competitive players who take Discord or team-manager calls mid-practice, multipoint is a daily-use upgrade.
The Niko Edition colorway is subtle rather than flashy, midnight blue with white accents and NiKo's signature embossed on the left earcup. 9to5toys noted the limited run is expected to sell out within 4-6 weeks, making this an investment-grade colorway for collectors.
Razer Synapse 4 support means per-game EQ profiles, mic sidetone tuning, and THX Spatial Audio scene presets. For competitive FPS players, the pre-tuned CS2 and Valorant spatial modes deliver meaningful directional audio gains.
What's missing or unverified
$200 (sale) is premium even for a flagship gaming headset. The Razer BlackShark V3 X at $99 delivers 80% of the audio quality without ANC or wireless. For casual gamers, the V3 X is the better value.
ANC on reduces battery life to 50 hours. Competitive players who always keep ANC on should factor that into run-time expectations.
Xbox Series X/S support is wired-only via the 3.5 mm cable. Xbox Wireless doesn't support Razer's HyperSpeed dongle. For Xbox-first gamers, SteelSeries Arctis 9X or Logitech G535 are better matches.
Mic quality is good (HyperClear Supercardioid) but not podcast-grade. Streamers and content creators typically pair this with a dedicated USB mic (Shure SM7B, Rode NT-USB).
Companion Razer Synapse 4 app is Windows-only for full feature access. Mac users can use the headset via Bluetooth but don't get the EQ customization.
Weight at 320 g is moderate. The HyperX Cloud III at 320 g is comparable; the Sony Inzone H6 Air at 260 g is noticeably lighter for long sessions.
The Niko Edition is cosmetically identical to the standard V3 Pro ANC internally. Buyers paying for the colorway should evaluate whether the $0-50 premium (depending on stock) over the base V3 Pro ANC is worth it.
Who it's for
Competitive FPS players (Counter-Strike 2, Valorant, Apex Legends) who value accurate directional audio plus multipoint Bluetooth for team-call management. Gaming streamers who need 70-hour battery for multi-day events. PC + PS5 dual-platform gamers who benefit from both HyperSpeed and multipoint. NiKo / CS2 fans who want the limited signature colorway. Travelers who want an all-in-one gaming + ANC airplane headset.
Not for: Xbox-first gamers, budget gamers (V3 X at $99 covers the basics), pure audiophile use cases (Sony WH-1000XM5 wins there), or players who demand lightweight ergonomics above all.
Verdict
The Razer BlackShark V3 Pro ANC Niko Edition at $200 is the right pick for competitive FPS players who want ANC, multipoint, and 70-hour battery in a single esports-certified package. The sale price plus NiKo colorway makes this a compelling limited-edition buy. Against Sony Inzone H6 Air at $299 (hi-fi tuning, lighter), Logitech G Pro X 2 Lightspeed at $249 (no ANC, 50-hour battery), and SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless at $349 (hot-swap battery, ANC, heavier), the Razer wins on battery and price-with-ANC; it loses on audio neutrality and weight. For the FPS-plus-travel buyer, this is the right pick.
This article was written by Dev, ProDrop’s Builder desk. It was fact-checked with a confidence score of 90%.
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