Noble Fokus Apollo Apollo

The patented 40mm dynamic and 14.5mm planar magnetic hybrid driver system delivers a wide soundstage, and 80-hour battery life with LDAC/aptX HD support ensures high-resolution wireless endurance. A lightweight aluminum frame, Alcantara headband, and plush memory foam earpads offer all-day comfort, while the detachable boom mic combined with a 6-mic array provides clear calls. Best for gamers and remote workers who need both audiophile-grade sound with low-latency gaming mode and a reliable boom microphone.

form factor over-ear
driver type Hybrid
driver size mm 40
impedance ohms 32
wireless true
active noise cancellation true
open closed back closed
bluetooth version 5.3
Noble Fokus Apollo Apollo headphones
56 Загальна оцінка
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Про цей Headphones

The FoKus Apollo is Noble's first forey into the world of over-ear headphones. The Apollo is a powerhouse of industry leading sound quality and innovation, featuring: The world's first 1x40mm dynamic driver + 14.5mm planar magnetic hybrid driver speaker arrangement; supported codecs include LDAC, AAC, aptX, aptX HD, SBC; QCC3084 chip; Integrated ADI chip combined with 3 microphones per side providing hybrid ANC with a reduction depth of up to -35db; BlueTooth 5.3; Superior transparency mode; Removable boom mic; Onboard mute switch for all microphones, including the boom mic; Excellent call quality with or without the supplied boom mic attached; Multipoint connection; 80 hours of play time without ANC / 60 hours of play time with ANC; Can be played with an included 3.5mm auxiliary cable; Accessories include an EVA carrying case, 3.5mm auxiliary cable, USB-C cable, two prong airline adapter, 1/4" adapter for headphone amps, a 3.5mm to 4.4mm adapter, and a detachable boom mic; Premium components including anodized aluminum frame, memory foam, premium protein leather earpads that are replaceable, and Alcantara headband material; Compatible with Noble's FoKus app.

  • 【PIONEERING HYBRID DRIVER SYSTEM】Features a patented 40mm dynamic + 14.5mm planar magnetic driver, expertly tuned by Noble’s “Wizard” Dr. John for audiophile-grade sound with rich bass, detailed highs, and a wide soundstage.
  • 【ADAPTIVE ANC & HI-RES AUDIO】Equipped with hybrid ANC (up to -35dB cancellation) and supports LDAC, aptX HD, and AAC for high-resolution wireless listening.
  • 【LONG BATTERY & MULTI-DEVICE SUPPORT】Offers 60–80 hours of playback and features Bluetooth 5.3 multi-point connectivity plus a low-latency gaming mode for seamless switching.
  • 【CLEAR CALLS & CUSTOM SOUND】Includes a detachable boom mic and 6-mic system for clear communication. Customize your sound via the Noble FoKus app with EQ and hearing test features.
  • 【PREMIUM COMFORT & BUILD】Crafted with alightweight aluminum frame and luxury Italian microfiber headband, complemented by plush memory foam earpads for all-day comfort. Features user-replaceable earpads for extended durability and maintenance.

The 30-Second Version

With sound and mic quality both ranking in the 100th percentile, the Noble Fokus Apollo is a lab champion. But real-world feedback paints a disastrous picture: user sentiment falls in the bottom 4th percentile, with widespread reports of dead-on-arrival units, earcup detachment, and punishing comfort. For $649, you're rolling the dice on a sonic masterpiece that might break before you finish a playlist.

Overview

The Noble Fokus Apollo headphones land right at the top of our sound quality charts—the 100th percentile, meaning they measure as well as anything we've ever tested. The microphone system, with its detachable boom and six-mic array, also claims the absolute best rank we've recorded. On paper, these are audiophile over-ears that promise studio-grade wireless listening, LDAC and aptX HD support, and an 80-hour battery life that sits in the 94th percentile. But a quick glance beyond the spec sheet shows a dramatically different story: user sentiment sits in the bottom 4th percentile, comfort in the 10th, and social proof is almost nonexistent with a 2.9-star average from just 32 reviews. The Apollo is a pure example of lab excellence clashing with real-world pain. Owners consistently describe a headphone that sounds incredible when it works, but the 'when it works' part is alarmingly uncertain. Reports of dead drivers out of the box, earcups detaching, and punishing clamping force dominate the feedback. Noble's customer service, when contacted, often goes silent. So while we have no doubt these can outperform a Sony WH-1000XM6 in a blind A/B test, the ownership experience is a roll of the dice. If you get a good unit and your head somehow finds them comfortable, you'll have a sonic marvel. But that's a big 'if'.

Performance

Forget the baggage for a moment, because the raw performance numbers are staggering. The hybrid 40mm dynamic + 14.5mm planar magnetic driver, tuned by Noble's Wizard Dr. John, delivers a sound profile that tops our database. It's not just a marginal lead; these headphones sit in the 100th percentile, alongside only a handful of products that cost far more. Detail retrieval, soundstage width, and bass control are all top-flight. The microphone setup (boom mic plus six onboard mics) also achieves a 100th percentile score, which means call quality rivals dedicated gaming headsets. That's backed by LDAC, aptX HD, and AAC codecs, plus Bluetooth 5.3 with multipoint, all of which earned a 97th percentile for connectivity. Battery life is another highlight: 80 hours without ANC (94th percentile) or 60 with it on, easily covering a work week. Adaptive hybrid ANC cuts up to -35dB, placing it in the 93rd percentile—not class-leading but still very effective in most environments. All these stellar metrics, however, come with a physical catch: weight. The listed spec is 1397g, which is absurdly heavy for headphones (most are around 250-300g). Whether that number is a typo or an incredible engineering feat, user feedback makes it clear these are not lightweight. Combined with a clamping pressure many find unbearable, the comfort score plummets to the 10th percentile. And build quality, which looks premium with its anodized aluminum and Alcantara, only reaches the 77th percentile—respectable but not bulletproof, and real-world snapshots of detached earcups back that up. So the Apollo is a performer that literally weighs on you.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 92.5
Mic 99.9
Build 77.1
Sound 99.8
Battery 94.2
Comfort 10
User Sentiment 4
Connectivity 96.6
Social Proof 15.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Sound quality in the 100th percentile—best-in-class clarity, detail, and soundstage. 100th
  • Microphone system (boom + 6 mics) also scores 100th percentile, excellent for calls and gaming. 100th
  • 80-hour battery life (94th percentile) means you can go over a week without charging. 97th
  • Connectivity scores 97th percentile with LDAC, aptX HD, Bluetooth 5.3, and multipoint. 94th
  • Hybrid ANC hits -35dB, placing it in the 93rd percentile for noise cancellation.

Cons

  • User sentiment in the 4th percentile—abysmal real-world reliability feedback. 4th
  • Comfort ranks 10th percentile; excessive weight and headband pressure ruin long sessions. 10th
  • Build quality has a mediocre 77th percentile score and common reports of earcups detaching. 16th
  • Social proof is near the bottom at 16th percentile, with a 2.9-star rating from only 32 reviews.
  • Value is weak (budget score of 50.5); even at $649, you're gambling on a unit that may be DOA.

The Word on the Street

2.9/5 (32 reviews)
👍 Sound clarity and detail are regularly praised as exceeding even the Sony XM6 and Sennheiser Momentum 4.
👎 Build quality and out-of-box defects are a dominant complaint, with multiple reports of one earcup not working or physically coming apart.
🤔 Comfort opinions split between those who adjust them successfully and the many who suffer from heavy weight and excessive headband pressure.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor over-ear
Open/Closed closed
Weight 1.4 kg / 3.1 lbs
Ear Cushion memory foam, premium protein leather
Headband Alcantara

Audio

Driver Type Hybrid
Driver Size 40
Drivers 2
Impedance 32
Hi-Res Audio Yes
Codecs LDAC, AAC, aptX, aptX HD, SBC

Noise Control

ANC Yes
ANC Type hybrid
Transparency Yes

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5.3
Multipoint Yes
Wired Connector 3.5mm
Detachable Cable Yes

Battery

Battery Life 80
Charging USB-C

Microphone

Microphone Yes
Mic Count 6
NC Mic Yes
Boom Mic Yes
Detachable Mic Yes

Features

App Noble FoKus app
Gaming Mode Yes

Value & Pricing

Pricing for the Apollo is all over the map—we've seen it anywhere from $649 at Amazon to over $1700 from third-party sellers. At the low end, $649 is a serious ask for a headphone with such compromised comfort and reliability. Its budget score comes in at a weak 50.5, reflecting poor price-to-satisfaction odds. If you can snag it for $649, you're paying for world-class sound potential, but you're also funding a lottery ticket for build quality and support. Considering the Sony WH-1000XM6 or Sennheiser MOMENTUM 4 deliver 90% of the audio performance with far more polish for less money, the Apollo's value proposition crumbles fast.

vs Competition

The Apollo's benchmark audio performance puts it above the Sony WH-1000XM6, Sennheiser MOMENTUM 4, and Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2. Those competitors all land in the high 80s or low 90s percentiles for sound, while the Apollo sits at 100. But that's where its lead ends. Sony's XM6 creams it in comfort (likely 90th+ percentile) and ANC refinement, and the Bose QuietComfort Ultra beats it by a mile in wearability and noise canceling. The Sennheiser Momentum 4 matches the battery endurance and has a more v-shaped, consumer-friendly tuning that many may prefer, all while being lighter and sturdier. Even the Technics EAH-A800 offers a more balanced compromise of sound and practical daily use. Unless you're determined to extract the last ounce of detail and don't mind the physical and quality-control pain, these mainstream flagships are the smarter buy.

Spec Noble Fokus Apollo Apollo Sony WH-1000XM6 WH-1000XM6 Sennheiser MOMENTUM 4 M4AEBT Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 Px8 S2 Bose QuietComfort Ultra QuietComfort Ultra Technics EAH-A800 EAH-A800
Form Factor over-ear over-ear over-ear over-ear over-ear over-ear
Driver Type Hybrid dynamic Dynamic dynamic Dynamic PEEK/Polyurethane 3-Layer Diaphragm
Driver Size (mm) 40 30 42 40 - 40
Impedance Ohms 32 48 470 - 32 34
Wireless true true true true true true
Active Noise Cancellation true true true true true true
Open Closed Back closed closed closed closed closed closed
Bluetooth Version 5.3 5.3 5.2 5.3 5.3 5.2
Battery Life Hours 80 30 60 30 24 50
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AncMicBuildSoundBatteryComfortUser SentimentConnectivitySocial Proof
Noble Fokus Apollo Apollo 92.599.977.199.894.210496.615.8
Sony WH-1000XM6 WH-1000XM6 Compare 97.791.392.295.172.779.5099.893.6
Sennheiser MOMENTUM 4 M4AEBT Compare 97.785.177.197.689.379.509979.1
Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 Px8 S2 Compare 97.799.495.999.472.750.887.597.598.8
Bose QuietComfort Ultra QuietComfort Ultra Compare 87.578.695.947.969.479.570.499.493.6
Technics EAH-A800 EAH-A800 Compare 92.598.377.196.983.850.819.993.198.8

Common Questions

Q: How does the Apollo's sound compare to the Sony WH-1000XM6?

In our objective tests, the Apollo scores a perfect 100th percentile for sound, beating the Sony WH-1000XM6 which typically ranks in the 80-90th percentile range. The Apollo's hybrid dynamic/planar driver delivers a wider soundstage and finer detail retrieval, but the XM6 is far more comfortable and offers superior noise cancellation.

Q: Is the battery life really 80 hours?

Yes, without ANC you get up to 80 hours (94th percentile), and 60 hours with ANC on. That's exceptional, nearly double what the Bose QuietComfort Ultra manages and on par with the Sennheiser Momentum 4.

Q: Are these headphones comfortable for long flights?

Probably not. Comfort is a major weak point, scoring in the 10th percentile. The listed weight of 1397g (if accurate) is staggeringly heavy, and many users report significant head pressure after 30 minutes. Unless you have an unusually tolerant head, they'll be a pain on a long flight.

Who Should Skip This

Skip the Apollo if you value comfort, reliability, or customer support. With a 10th percentile comfort score and a user sentiment in the 4th percentile, the odds are high you'll end up with an uncomfortable pair that fails out of the box and leaves you ghosted by Noble. For gamers or commuters who need all-day wearability and a stress-free experience, any of the mainstream flagship alternatives will serve you better.

Verdict

The Noble Fokus Apollo is a conundrum. It records some of the finest audio measurements we've ever seen, and its microphone setup is unrivaled. But the ownership experience, as captured by a 4th percentile user sentiment score, is fraught with hardware failures, discomfort, and nonexistent support. This is a headphone for the uncompromising audiophile who's willing to take a risk and deal with returns—and even then, it's a hard sell. For everyone else, the vast majority of buyers, the Apollo's weaknesses eclipse its sonic brilliance. We can't recommend it.

Usage Scores

Work (64.6)Calls (64.4)Music (59.8)Overall (55.7)Budget (50.5)Gaming (74.6)Studio (58)Commute (56.5)

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