HyperX FlipCast microphone review: USB and XLR in one, but no mount in the box

The HyperX FlipCast is a quality way to upgrade your recording setup and leave room for future expansions, but it's pricey and a little odd.

Image of the HyperX FlipCast microphone.
(Image: © Windows Central | Zachary Boddy)

Windows Central Verdict

The HyperX FlipCast is a premium microphone that supports USB plug-and-play — but it can also take full advantage of more advanced, modular XLR setups. Its recording prowess is up there with the best, and it's supremely easy to use, but the FlipCast is also expensive enough to make other high-end microphones worth considering instead, especially when you remember you'll also need to buy a mount.

Pros

  • +

    Great, clear audio with excellent AI noise cancelation

  • +

    High-quality design with intuitive onboard controls

  • +

    Dual USB/XLR inputs means this microphone can grow with your setup

Cons

  • -

    Pricey if you don't need both USB and XLR

  • -

    There's no stand in the box

  • -

    Other microphones offer more software features

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Whatever your reason for wanting one — to become a content creator, because you're always in voice calls, or even because you want to dabble in music — choosing the best microphone for you can feel impossible.

That's even without considering the differences between easy-to-use USB microphones and more flexible, professional XLR microphones. What if you could choose a microphone that does both just as well, though? That's where HP and HyperX are coming in with the FlipCast, an ultra-premium microphone that tries to be the best of both worlds.

Disclaimer

This review was made possible thanks to a review sample provided by HP. HyperX and HP had no input nor saw the contents of this review prior to publication.

Refined hardware and excellent audio quality

Like many of the most popular professional-grade microphones, the HyperX FlipCast is a front-address dynamic microphone with a sleek, matte black cylindrical design. Of course, it also boasts some of the gamer-esque details I expect from HyperX.

HyperX FlipCast

• Microphone: Front-address, dynamic capsule, cardioid polar pattern, 20-20,000Hz frequency response, 192KHz sampling rate
• Connectivity: USB Type-C, XLR
• Features: RGB light strip, multi-level LED meter, multi-function dial, built-in high pass & presence boost filters, touch-sensitive mute button, HyperX NGENUITY software support, universal mount support (3/8-inch & 5/8-inch threads)
• Weight: 572g (1.26lbs)

That includes the RGB light strip in the middle, which is fully customizable... but turns off when the microphone is muted. This is similar behavior to the HyperX QuadCast 2 S I reviewed, but the FlipCast also has an LED indicator strip that turns red when muted, so I wish I could choose to have the RGB lighting stay on.

Speaking of that LED indicator meter, it's one of the FlipCast's best design features. By default, it indicates audio levels, but the multi-function wheel behind it can switch between headset volume, monitoring levels, and microphone gain. In general, the FlipCast's onboard controls are intuitive and useful, even if the touch-sensitive mute button feels a little too easy to press.

It all helps the FlipCast look and feel like the premium microphone its price tag suggests, but how good it is at actually capturing sound is obviously even more important.

The HyperX FlipCast is absolutely a high-resolution microphone with some serious recording props, even if it doesn't boast a wide array of different pickup patterns. It's a front-address microphone, so you'll want it pointing directly at your mouth.

Overall, audio quality is deep, clear, and consistent, exactly as I expected. The FlipCast feels similar in quality overall to the aforementioned QuadCast 2 S, but its AI noise cancellation is even better. This microphone is genuinely among the best at filtering out unwanted background noise, even without relying on the high-pass and presence boost filters built into the FlipCast.

I wouldn't say the FlipCast decidedly takes the crown among other high-end microphones in this price bracket (companies like Shure still wear that crown), but it certainly doesn't disappoint.

USB and XLR versatility, but simple software

The HyperX FlipCast box only contains the basics, and that doesn't mean a stand. (Image credit: Windows Central | Zachary Boddy)

The biggest selling point for the HyperX FlipCast is the inclusion of both USB and XLR connectivity. All-in-one USB microphones can be more affordable and are far easier to set up and use, but XLR microphones can deliver greater audio fidelity and support modular upgrades and enhancements.

Why would you want both in one microphone? Well, the FlipCast can support a dual-PC setup with simultaneous USB and XLR, or be easily used with different setups, but the real advantage is that you can invest in a great plug-and-play microphone now, and then upgrade to a more professional XLR setup down the line without having to buy a new mic.

The HyperX FlipCast isn't unique here, but dual USB/XLR microphones aren't exactly common — especially from major brands. The most well-known is likely the Shure MV7+, which you can get for $299.99 at Amazon.com and is critically acclaimed.

That microphone is a fair bit more expensive than the FlipCast (and also doesn't include a stand in the box), but you're also getting Shure's legendary audio quality and greater suite of software features and integration. This is the FlipCast's greatest weakness; HyperX NGENUITY is intuitive, but it lacks the deeper customization that brands like Shure and AVerMedia offer for their microphones.

It's also worth mentioning that, if you're confident you'll never want a full XLR recording setup, you can get an excellent USB microphone for less (like the aforementioned HyperX QuadCast 2 S, which does have a stand in the box).

HyperX FlipCast review: My final thoughts

I really like this microphone, and it'll serve some peope great. (Image credit: Windows Central | Zachary Boddy)

✅You should buy this if ...

  • You want a microphone with both USB and XLR connectivity.
  • You need intuitive onboard controls and software.
  • You want consistently great audio recording and noise cancellation.

❌You should not buy this if ...

  • You don't really need a high-end XLR microphone.
  • You don't want to pay extra for a proper microphone mount.

The HyperX FlipCast is an excellent studio-grade microphone that's competing with some of the most popular on the market, with consistently great audio quality, an attractive and intuitive design, and surprisingly effective AI-powered noise cancellation.

It can also grow with you thanks to USB and XLR connectivity, which is a huge boon for anyone investing in themselves for content creation or other professional endeavors. That makes the HyperX FlipCast a top-notch option in my eyes, but just because other high-end, front-address microphones forgo including a stand in the box doesn't make it any less annoying here, and you're already paying a nice chunk of change for the FlipCast.

Still, HyperX is once again proving its accessories aren't just for gamers with the FlipCast. It may not be the absolute best microphone across every category, but it does deliver more than enough to earn my recommendation. If this is the microphone for you, the HyperX FlipCast is now available for $229.99 at BestBuy.com and at Amazon.com.

If you also want the exact microphone arm mount I used, that's the HyperX Caster available for $139.99 at HP.com. Check out my in-depth HyperX Caster review for more information on it.


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Zachary Boddy
Staff Writer

Zachary Boddy (They / Them) is a Staff Writer for Windows Central, primarily focused on covering the latest news in tech and gaming, the best Xbox and PC games, and the most interesting Windows and Xbox hardware. They have been gaming and writing for most of their life starting with the original Xbox, and started out as a freelancer for Windows Central and its sister sites in 2019. Now a full-fledged Staff Writer, Zachary has expanded from only writing about all things Minecraft to covering practically everything on which Windows Central is an expert, especially when it comes to Microsoft.

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