Fractal Scape marks the brand’s first wireless gaming headset in June

With a sprinkling of Apple inspiration, which is by no means a bad thing.

Fractal Scape is set to launch globally on June 18, marking the Swedish company’s formal step into the world of PC audio. Best known for its minimalist PC cases and cooling gear, it brings the same blend of sophistication and quality to its first gaming headset, complete with a charging stand to keep your cans neatly displayed on the desk.

Originally teased at Computex 2024 alongside the sumptuous Refine gaming chair, Scape turns heads in a more subtle way. True to Fractal form, the headset doesn’t scream “gamer” with garish RGB or bulky plastics. Instead, it leans into Scandinavian design language – think clean silhouettes, soft-touch fabric, and a sense of deliberate restraint. It’s clearly designed to look at home both on your desk and your head.

Functionally, the wireless headset covers the bases with low-latency audio via a bundled 2.4GHz dongle and Bluetooth 5.3 for mobile and multi-device flexibility. The flip-to-mute microphone adds flexibility for calls or solo sessions, which you can detach when you’re out and about for a cleaner travel look.

Fractal Scape sitting in its charging dock.

One standout feature is Fractal’s configuration tool, Adjust Pro, which lives entirely online and requires neither a software install nor user account. It allows you to tweak audio presets and lighting to your liking – an approach that feels refreshingly frictionless at a time when many brands want to funnel you into bloated software suites or data-hungry ecosystems. It’s refreshingly minimal, in true Fractal fashion.

There’s no official spec sheet just yet on drivers, battery life, or platform compatibility, but with a launch price of $199.99 USD, Scape is gunning for the same territory occupied by the likes of SteelSeries Arctis Nova 7 and Razer BlackShark V2 Pro. We expect full technical details to land closer to launch.

Fractal has been gradually assembling a premium ecosystem of peripherals designed to appeal to the style-conscious PC crowd. The Terra and North cases already redefined what small form factor and airflow chassis could look like, while Refine offered a surprisingly plush alternative to the usual faux-racer seat. Scape feels like the next logical step – functional, beautiful, and just a little different.

We’ll have more to say once review samples land, which you can catch by following Club386 on Google News. Still, on first glance, Fractal Scape is shaping up to be a tasteful contender in a market often oversaturated with carbon-fibre motifs and overcooked branding. Pre-orders aren’t yet open, but keep your ears pricked for when they do.

Damien Mason
Damien Mason
Senior hardware editor at Club386, he first began his journey with consoles before graduating to PCs. What began as a quest to edit video for his Film and Television Production degree soon spiralled into an obsession with upgrading and optimising his rig.

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