VerdictĬompared with its main rivals, such as the UE Megaboom, the Revolve is a bit too pricey. Its sense of energy and drive is apparent with whatever you song you play through it, and when it goes loud, it’s capable of impressive volume. The Bose Revolve is less insightful, but it’s still fun to listen to. The Megaboom breathes in more openness into the performance, and you can identify instruments’ placement better, too. The Megaboom delivers a bigger scale of sound, too, but then it is physically bigger. Its rival, the UE Megaboom, is more articulate and handles dynamic shifts and rhythm changes with more confidence. It’s not perfect – we wish the Bose sounded clearer, and that edges of notes were more definite and crisply defined. The guitar strums in Death Cab for Cutie’s A Lack of Colour sound delicate and precise, while voices are gentle and melodic. It delivers plenty of detail alongside the punch. If you like what you see here and want to help me keep it going, please consider donating via the PayPal Contribute button below.There’s a warmth to the sound that makes it enjoyable to listen to, and this time, Bose steers clear of making the bass go too boomy. It doesn’t have the low end response the Revolve+ does but it does generally sound more neutral (as neutral as a speaker like this can be). However, at lower levels where the bass does not need to be limited, I prefer the sound of the Apple HomePod Mini. For the extra $70 or so, I’d get the Revolve+. Easier than using the Apple HomePod Mini. Connection to both units is quick and extremely easy. The bass is fuller (a bit too full at low volumes but some may like this). It gets louder without suffering (as much) distortion. I find the Revolve+ to be the better speaker overall. But as volume increases, the limiter kicks in and lowers the bass output on both units. Even when switching back and forth with music shows this to be the case even at the same volume.
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