Noble’s $199 Osprey Earbuds Aim Straight at Sony’s XM6

The $200 true wireless earbud market is crowded, but the brands filling it are mostly consumer electronics companies that tune for mass appeal rather than accuracy. Getting earbuds with any real audiophile pedigree under that threshold has historically meant compromising somewhere meaningful, whether on driver quality, build, or sound character. Most listeners have made their peace with that trade-off and gone with whatever Sony or Sennheiser had on the shelf.

The Noble Audio Osprey debuted at High End Vienna 2026 and starts shipping at the end of June at $199. Noble has spent years building custom in-ear monitors that sell for four figures to listeners who argue about driver counts and cable geometry. Compressing that into a sub-$200 true wireless product is a considerable stretch, and the Osprey’s choices reflect what had to be preserved and what didn’t.

Designer: Noble Audio

The Osprey uses a hybrid dual-driver configuration, pairing a 10mm dynamic driver with a custom balanced armature. The dynamic driver handles low-end weight and warmth, delivering bass that’s smooth and thick rather than just punchy, while the balanced armature supports midrange detail and treble precision. The frequency response spans 20Hz to 40kHz, wider than most consumer earbuds at this price point.

That driver combination pays off most noticeably in the soundstage, which reviewers describe as genuinely expansive, with strong depth and layering that becomes especially clear in music with complex percussion. The signature leans slightly V-shaped, with the low end its most impressive range. Mids are full and anchoring rather than recessed, and highs are crisp and extended without tipping into harshness, a balance that works across most genres.

Noble kept most of its visual identity intact. The Osprey carries the marbled acrylic faceplate aesthetic from the FoKus line, with layered blues that read as deliberate rather than generic. The aluminum charging case matches the color and keeps the premium feel without adding bulk.

On the practical side, the Osprey includes hybrid ANC, a Hearing Through mode for ambient awareness, and multipoint connectivity for switching between two devices without re-pairing. ANC handles lower frequencies well, though some higher-pitched background noise still gets through. Dual microphones with cVc noise reduction handle calls, and Bluetooth 6.0 via the Airoha 1571 chipset holds a fast, stable connection even in busier wireless environments.

Battery life sits at seven hours with ANC off and five hours with it on, in line with most competitors. Quick charging is where the Osprey pulls ahead: 10 minutes in the case delivers roughly two hours of listening, a figure that outpaces several earbuds well above this price. The 500mAh aluminum case uses USB-C, and the Noble FoKus app adds a 10-band EQ, touch remapping, and over-the-air updates.

For context, Sony’s WF-1000XM6 retails at $329.95 and the Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 4 at $299.95, putting the Osprey around $100 to $130 below either. LDAC support separates it further from mainstream earbuds at the same price, most of which cap out at AAC. Noble Audio opened pre-orders on June 4, with units shipping by the end of June, available directly at nobleaudio.com and through select retailers.