
There’s a specific moment that happens when you first hear deep bass done properly. Your brain needs a second to process what’s happening because the sound doesn’t match what you expect from a speaker that size. I experienced that exact moment at CES 2026 while listening to Brane Audio’s Party Pro prototype, and for the sake of the rest of the hotel guests, Brane only limited the demo to 10 seconds and played its audio at 25% capacity. The sound is so thundering (especially the base notes), Brane had to quite literally hold its speaker back to avoid noise complaints.
Brane Audio structured their CES presentation strategically, starting with the Brane X to establish their credibility against established competition. Then they unveiled the Party Pro, and the difference was staggering. The low-end reproduction didn’t just sound powerful; it revealed details in familiar tracks that had been buried under inadequate bass response for years. Only after the demo did they mention the kicker: we’d been listening to a single RAD2 driver at half capacity. The shipping version with two drivers will hit four times harder, which means this might legitimately be the first speaker good enough to make your neighbors consider moving.
Designer: Brane Audio

That single driver, the RAD2, is the whole story here. It’s the second generation of their Repel-Attract Driver tech, and the numbers are just absurd. They claim a 30-fold deep-bass advantage over conventional drivers, which sounds like marketing fluff until you hear it for yourself. The genius is in how it handles the lowest frequencies. Instead of just producing a generic boom, it articulates the bass, letting you hear textures and notes in the sub-100Hz range that are usually a muddy mess. You start hearing things in your favorite songs you swear were never there before, which is a wild and slightly surreal experience.

Closer look at the RAD2 Driver
The way it prepares for that bass is mechanically fascinating. The original RAD driver in the Brane X used a small air pump to create the necessary pressure differential. For the RAD2, they’ve engineered a system of small mechanical legs that physically push the driver cone outward to prime it before the music even starts. This pre-tensioning creates the pressure needed for its massive excursion without the lag or potential noise of a pump. It’s a clever bit of electromechanical engineering that solves a very specific physics problem, and watching it happen is almost as impressive as hearing the result. It’s a purely functional design choice that looks incredibly cool.

This level of mechanical control allows for some seriously smart audio processing. Brane’s team explained that the speaker’s internal DSP analyzes the incoming audio in real-time to identify the resonant frequency of each specific track. It then adjusts the driver’s behavior to perfectly match that frequency, essentially tuning itself to every song it plays. This is a huge leap beyond simple EQ presets. The speaker is actively collaborating with the music, ensuring that the bass response is not just powerful but also perfectly in sync with the artist’s original intent. It explains why the bass felt so integrated and clean, rather than being a loud, detached layer on top of the music.


So you take that resonant frequency matching, add the mechanical priming system, and then remember the demo was at quarter-power. The final Party Pro, with its two drivers, will displace a full 1000cc of air, which is an immense amount of sound pressure from a portable enclosure. Brane is essentially breaking Hofmann’s Iron Law, that old rule about deep bass, small boxes, and power efficiency being mutually exclusive. They’ve found a way to have all three. This technology is a new blueprint for how to generate low-frequency sound. I walked away from that demo feeling like I’d just seen the audio equivalent of the first flat-screen TV. The Party Pro will hit shelves later this year, with a price range between $1000 and $1500. You honestly may need to take permission from your Homeowner’s Association before you buy one!