Headset Characteristics & Problem Analysis
Sub-Bass (20–60 Hz) Slightly Weak Needs gentle lift for impact
Bass (60–200 Hz) Elevated & Muddy 100–180 Hz bloat masks vocals
Low-Mids (200–600 Hz) Congested Boxiness, makes voices muffled
Mids (600–2k Hz) Recessed (V-shape) Core problem for dialogue clarity
Upper-Mids (2–5k Hz) Slightly Thin Boosting here = clarity without harshness
Treble (6–10k Hz) Harsh Peak Causes fatigue at louder volumes
Air (10–20k Hz) Rolls Off Early Missing sparkle and space
Soundstage Narrow & Closed EQ can partially compensate
Engineering Note — Why the MH89 struggles with anime audio:
Anime mixes in Japan are often broadcast-mastered with dialogue at −23 LUFS and BGM very close in level. The MH89's V-shaped tuning boosts bass and treble while pulling back the 800 Hz–3 kHz range — exactly where 85% of voiced Japanese dialogue sits. The result: background music bleeds over character voices. Every preset below addresses this at the frequency level, not just volume.
⚠ Clipping Warning: Always set the Preamp value FIRST before applying any band boosts. The Preamp compensates for total gain added to the signal chain. Failure to set it will cause digital clipping and distortion regardless of how good the EQ settings are.
01
GENERAL ALL-ROUNDER ANIME
Daily driver — balanced clarity, warmth, and immersion for any anime genre
★ Anime Movies Music Light Gaming
Preamp
−3.5 dB
Listening Volume
50–65% System
EQ Band Configuration — Copy to Peace GUI
# Frequency Gain Q Value Filter Engineering Reason
1 32 Hz +3.0 dB 0.70 Peak (LSC) Gentle sub-bass shelf adds cinematic depth for OSTs. Wide Q avoids boom. MH89 needs help below 50 Hz.
2 80 Hz +2.0 dB 1.00 Peak Adds bass body without mudding up the 100–200 Hz danger zone. Taiko drums and bass instruments feel full.
3 180 Hz −3.0 dB 1.20 Peak THE most important cut for the MH89. This is where its bass bloat lives. Removing this immediately clears vocals and reduces mud.
4 400 Hz −1.5 dB 1.40 Peak Cuts the "cardboard box" resonance typical of closed gaming headsets. Opens up the midrange space.
5 1,000 Hz +1.0 dB 2.00 Peak Gentle push at the fundamental harmonic zone for male/female anime voices. Adds body to dialogue.
6 2,500 Hz +2.5 dB 1.80 Peak Primary presence boost. This is where Japanese voice acting consonants and vowel clarity live. Voices "pop" forward from music.
7 4,000 Hz +2.0 dB 2.00 Peak Sharpens word intelligibility. Makes whispered or fast-spoken lines land. Key anime clarity frequency.
8 6,500 Hz −2.5 dB 1.80 Peak This is the MH89's harshness peak. Cutting here removes listening fatigue without touching the clarity we built above.
9 10,000 Hz +1.5 dB 1.40 Peak Restores air and sparkle that 40mm drivers roll off. Instruments breathe, cymbals sound natural.
10 16,000 Hz −1.0 dB 1.00 High Shelf Prevents the ultra-high frequency glare. Smooth, natural top-end extension without digital sheen.
✓ Pros
Handles any anime genre competently
Voices are consistently clear over BGM
Non-fatiguing for 2–3 hour sessions
OSTs sound musical and full
Safe preamp headroom, no clipping
✗ Cons
Bass not as impactful as action-specific presets
Not tuned for competitive gaming precision
Compromise means it excels at nothing singularly
Peace GUI Setup Steps
01Open Peace GUI. Set Pre Amplifying slider to −3.5 dB first.
02Click + to add bands until you have 10. Delete unused default bands with .
03For each band: click the frequency label and type the exact Hz value from the table above.
04Set Gain by dragging the slider or double-clicking to type. Verify with the Gain Values row at the bottom.
05Set Q values by clicking the Quality (Q) field per band and typing the value.
06Filter type: keep all as Peak (Bell) except band 1 (Low Shelf) and band 10 (High Shelf). Click the filter icon to change.
07Click Save, type Anime All-Rounder as the name, press Enter.
08Toggle the green power button ON. Play test audio. Adjust preamp down if you hear any distortion.
⚙ Optional Compressor (Peace → Effects)
Threshold−18 dB
Ratio2.5:1
Attack15 ms
Release200 ms
Gain+2 dB makeup
🎭 Dolby Atmos Compatibility
Atmos ModeMovie or Music
Conflict RiskLow — compatible
Reduce preamp to−5 dB with Atmos ON
Disable Atmos EQUnder Atmos settings
02
DIALOGUE BOOST / VOCAL CLARITY
For anime where BGM overpowers voices — whispers, fast speech, quiet characters always audible
★ Anime Dialogue Subtitles Aid
Preamp
−4.5 dB
Listening Volume
50–70% System
EQ Band Configuration — Copy to Peace GUI
#FrequencyGainQFilterEngineering Reason
150 Hz−4.0 dB0.70Low ShelfAggressively reduce sub-bass energy that BGM and action sounds use to mask dialogue. Less bass = more room for voices at the same overall volume.
2150 Hz−4.5 dB1.20PeakUpper bass is the #1 masking frequency for anime vocal fundamentals. Cutting this single band has more dialogue clarity impact than any boost.
3320 Hz−2.5 dB1.40PeakLow-mid mud that turns dialogue into a "wah" sound in busy scenes. Cut cleans up the acoustic space for voice placement.
4800 Hz+1.5 dB2.00PeakLower vocal body region — adds warmth to dialogue without muddying it. Makes thin voices sound natural.
51,500 Hz+3.0 dB1.80PeakVowel clarity zone — "a", "e", "i" sounds in Japanese become sharply defined. Crucial for understanding fast-spoken lines without subtitles.
62,800 Hz+4.5 dB1.80PeakPrimary dialogue intelligibility frequency. This is where the human ear focuses for speech recognition. Largest boost justified here.
74,200 Hz+3.5 dB2.00PeakConsonant attack — "k", "t", "s" sounds in Japanese make speech fully intelligible. Critical for whispers and emotional monologues.
86,500 Hz−4.0 dB2.00PeakKill the MH89 harshness peak without mercy. We already boosted clarity above this — this cut only removes fatigue, not intelligibility.
99,000 Hz−2.0 dB1.50PeakSibilance control — prevents "ssss" sounds from piercing. Important when using high 2–4 kHz boosts above.
1014,000 Hz+1.5 dB1.20PeakHigh-frequency air above sibilance range — adds naturalness without harshness. Voices don't sound "boxed in."
✓ Pros
Most extreme vocal clarity of all 8 presets
Whispers are audible at any volume
BGM feels appropriately "behind" voices
Works perfectly for subtitled and dubbed anime
✗ Cons
Bass is noticeably reduced — not for OST enjoyment
Music sounds thin and analytical
Not enjoyable for action anime fight scenes
Peace GUI Setup Steps
01Set Preamp to −4.5 dB BEFORE touching any bands.
02Band 1 → set as Low Shelf filter type at 50 Hz, −4.0 dB. This is a global bass reduction.
03Pay special attention to bands 6 and 7 (+4.5 and +3.5 dB). After setting them, play speech-heavy audio and verify no distortion.
04If voices sound too "nasal" or "honky," reduce band 5 (1500 Hz) by 0.5 dB at a time until natural.
05Save as Dialogue Clarity.
⚙ Compressor Settings (Critical for this preset)
Threshold−14 dB
Ratio4:1 (tighter)
Attack8 ms
Release120 ms
NoteCompressor reduces BGM peaks so voices aren't buried by sudden loud music swells
🎭 Dolby Atmos Compatibility
Atmos ModeOFF or Voice/Dialog
Conflict RiskMedium — Atmos adds bass
RecommendationDisable Atmos for this preset — it undoes the bass cuts
03
ACTION / SHŌNEN CINEMA
Demon Slayer · Jujutsu Kaisen · Attack on Titan · Solo Leveling — cinematic impact with readable dialogue
★ Action Anime Action Films Boss Fights
Preamp
−5.5 dB
Listening Volume
45–60% System
EQ Band Configuration — Copy to Peace GUI
#FrequencyGainQFilterEngineering Reason
128 Hz+5.0 dB0.60Low ShelfRumbling sub-bass for Titan footsteps, Tanjiro breathing techniques, Solo Leveling gate opens. Very wide Q so it doesn't boom, just rumbles physically.
275 Hz+4.0 dB1.00PeakPunch and impact. Sword clashes, explosion shockwaves, Jujutsu Kaisen domain expansions feel visceral. Core bass power frequency.
3160 Hz+1.5 dB1.20PeakWarmth without mud — keeps orchestral strings and brass in the fight scenes full-bodied. Careful: going higher causes mud, lower wastes energy.
4280 Hz−3.0 dB1.40PeakEven with all that bass boost above, we MUST cut here to prevent the mud cascade. This keeps bass tight and allows voices to remain audible during fights.
5900 Hz0.0 dBBypassLeave flat — this is transition space. Don't over-engineer the midrange for action content.
62,200 Hz+3.0 dB2.00PeakDialogue intelligibility maintained during action chaos. Voices cut through the orchestral madness of Hiroyuki Sawano OSTs.
74,000 Hz+2.5 dB1.80PeakSharpens sword slashes, impact hits, battle cries. Doubles as dialogue consonant clarity during fight scenes.
86,500 Hz−3.5 dB2.00PeakHard cut on harshness. Action anime mixes are already bright — this prevents the MH89's 6.5k peak from making explosions unpleasant.
910,000 Hz+2.5 dB1.40PeakCinematic air. Cymbals shimmer, soundstage opens, Yuki Kajiura / Hiroyuki Sawano strings breathe. Above the harsh zone, safe to boost.
1016,000 Hz+1.5 dB1.20High ShelfExtension sparkle — gives the MH89's 40mm driver a sense of reaching beyond its physical limits. Epic battle scores feel larger.
✓ Pros
Explosions and impact sounds feel physical
Epic orchestral OSTs are immersive
Dialogue remains readable in action scenes
Sub-bass adds presence without headache
✗ Cons
Highest risk of clipping — watch preamp closely
Not suitable for quiet SoL episodes
Bass can feel excessive on non-action content
Peace GUI Setup Steps
01Set preamp to −5.5 dB. This is the highest-risk preset for clipping due to the large sub-bass boosts.
02Band 1 at 28 Hz: set filter to Low Shelf. Avoid Peak here — you want broad sub-bass lift, not a narrow hump.
03Test with a fight scene from Demon Slayer Entertainment District arc or AoT Season 4. Listen for any crackling.
04If you hear bass distortion, lower preamp further to −6.0 dB and raise system volume slightly to compensate.
05Save as Action Shonen Cinema.
⚙ Compressor (Highly Recommended)
Threshold−20 dB
Ratio3:1
Attack20 ms (slow — preserve transients)
Release300 ms
PurposeTames sudden explosion peaks so dialogue afterward isn't lost
🎭 Dolby Atmos Compatibility
Best ModeMovie
Conflict RiskMedium-High
Action PlanIf using Atmos, reduce preamp to −7 dB and cut 75 Hz band to +2.5 dB to prevent overload
04
SLICE OF LIFE / ROMANCE
Horimiya · Your Lie in April · Clannad · Violet Evergarden — warm, emotional, non-fatiguing
★ SoL & Romance Piano / Acoustic
Preamp
−2.5 dB
Listening Volume
55–70% System
EQ Band Configuration — Copy to Peace GUI
#FrequencyGainQFilterEngineering Reason
155 Hz+1.5 dB0.80Low ShelfVery gentle sub-bass — just enough to feel the warmth of piano lower registers and cello. This is a "felt, not heard" boost.
2140 Hz+2.0 dB1.40PeakWarmth frequency — gives voices and acoustic instruments their body and emotional weight. Your Lie in April's piano sounds rich, not tinny.
3300 Hz−1.5 dB1.40PeakSmall cut to prevent the warmth above from turning into muddiness. Keeps the low-end definition without losing intimacy.
4700 Hz+0.5 dB2.00PeakTiny lift for vocal chest resonance. Dialogue in SoL feels intimate and close, like the character is speaking directly to you.
51,800 Hz+2.5 dB2.00PeakVocal presence without harshness. Emotional confessions, soft-spoken dialogue, internal monologues — all delivered with clarity.
63,200 Hz+2.0 dB2.20PeakGentle clarity boost — narrower Q keeps it from sounding clinical. Natural voice quality for emotional scenes.
75,500 Hz−3.0 dB1.80PeakFirst harshness cut — below the MH89's main 6.5k peak but addresses the leading edge of treble aggression. Violin highs become silky.
87,000 Hz−3.5 dB1.80PeakSecond cut — the MH89's actual harshness peak. Together with band 7, this creates a smooth "dark roll" through 5–7k. Zero fatigue.
910,000 Hz−1.0 dB1.40PeakSlight softening. Clannad and Your Lie in April have very clean recordings — we don't need aggressive air, just smoothness.
1015,000 Hz−2.0 dB0.80High ShelfGentle treble rolloff for a warm, analog-like presentation. Prevents digital sheen that sounds unnatural on acoustic music content.
✓ Pros
Zero listening fatigue — can watch for 4+ hours
Piano and strings sound beautiful and natural
Intimate vocal presentation — emotional impact preserved
Works excellently for music listening too
✗ Cons
Sounds dull on action content — switch presets
Darker sound may seem "wrong" at first
Bass is modest — not for bass lovers
Peace GUI Setup Steps
01Set preamp to −2.5 dB — lowest preamp needed among all presets, minimal clipping risk.
02Bands 7 and 8 both cut in the 5–7k range. Verify both are set — they work together as a smooth notch filter.
03Band 10 uses High Shelf — click the filter icon and select High Shelf.
04Test with the Clannad OST or Your Lie in April piano scenes. Tune should feel warm and intimate, like good headphones in a quiet room.
05Save as SoL Romance.
⚙ Compressor (Optional — light touch)
Threshold−22 dB
Ratio1.8:1 (very gentle)
Attack25 ms
Release400 ms (slow, musical)
PurposeKeeps dynamics musical; mostly skip compressor for this preset
🎭 Dolby Atmos Compatibility
ModeMusic or OFF
Conflict RiskLow
NoteAtmos Music mode adds pleasant spatial enhancement — works well with this preset's warmth
05
DARK / PSYCHOLOGICAL / THRILLER
Death Note · Monster · Steins;Gate · Paranoia Agent — atmospheric tension and ambient detail
★ Psychological Horror / Thriller
Preamp
−3.5 dB
Listening Volume
55–65% System
EQ Band Configuration — Copy to Peace GUI
#FrequencyGainQFilterEngineering Reason
135 Hz+3.0 dB0.70Low ShelfDeep atmospheric rumble — L's theme in Death Note, the hum of the time machine in Steins;Gate. Tension is felt physically, not heard loudly.
2100 Hz+1.5 dB1.20PeakSlight body to bass — keeps the soundtrack menacing without booming. Psychological anime uses sparse, tense scoring that benefits from controlled weight.
3250 Hz−3.0 dB1.40PeakClean cut to let ambient details come through. Environmental sounds (footsteps, room hum, rain) emerge from the mix — critical for thriller immersion.
4600 Hz−1.0 dB1.80PeakVery slight mid dip for "darker" presentation — makes the atmosphere feel more ominous without losing voice clarity.
51,200 Hz+1.5 dB2.00PeakPrecise voice body — monologue-heavy anime (Death Note, Monster) relies on perfectly weighted vocal delivery. This preserves that weight.
62,500 Hz+2.5 dB2.00PeakDialogue intelligibility for quiet, deliberate speech. L's whispers, Light's internal monologue — every word must be clear and precise.
74,500 Hz+3.0 dB1.80PeakAmbient detail retrieval — this frequency reveals background sound design. Footsteps on marble floors, clock ticking, ambient hum all become more present.
87,000 Hz−2.5 dB2.00PeakTame harshness — psychological anime often uses sharp string stabs; this cut prevents them from becoming painful while keeping their tension.
912,000 Hz+2.0 dB1.40PeakAir and spatial cue retrieval above the harsh zone. Gives the MH89 a sense of room size — important for soundstage simulation in thriller ambience.
1016,000 Hz+1.5 dB1.20High ShelfExtension — the high-frequency content in room ambience and reverb tails is lifted here. Creates the illusion of a larger acoustic space.
✓ Pros
Environmental sounds are highly detailed
Soundstage feels noticeably wider
Tense atmosphere conveyed effectively
Deliberate, quiet dialogue is fully intelligible
✗ Cons
Mid-dip makes music sound somewhat analytical
High-frequency boosts can expose noise in poor source files
Peace GUI Setup Steps
01Set preamp to −3.5 dB.
02The 12k and 16k boosts (bands 9–10) simulate soundstage. If your source audio is low quality (below 720p), reduce them by 1 dB each — they will amplify encoding artifacts.
03Test with the Death Note opening scene or Steins;Gate lab ambience. You should hear the room, not just the characters.
04Save as Dark Psychological.
⚙ Compressor
Threshold−16 dB
Ratio2:1
Attack30 ms (preserve jump scares)
Release250 ms
🎭 Dolby Atmos Compatibility
ModeMovie — EXCELLENT match
NoteAtmos Movie mode's spatial processing pairs extremely well — enhances the already-wide soundstage tuning here
06
EXTREME CINEMA MODE
Maximum theatrical immersion — anime films, cinematic specials, concert events. Theater-like scale.
★ Cinematic Anime Films Symphonic
Preamp
−6.5 dB
Listening Volume
40–55% System
EQ Band Configuration — Copy to Peace GUI
#FrequencyGainQFilterEngineering Reason
125 Hz+5.5 dB0.55Low ShelfMaximum sub-bass extension. At 25 Hz you're at the edge of headphone reproduction — this creates tactile pressure sensation. Use carefully with 40mm drivers.
260 Hz+5.0 dB0.90PeakPeak bass punch — movie theater LFE channel equivalent. This is the "you feel the explosion" frequency. Sets the MH89 to its absolute bass limit.
3130 Hz+2.5 dB1.20PeakUpper bass warmth for orchestral full-ness. Connects the sub thump to the musical mid-bass. Kept modest to prevent muddying above.
4280 Hz−4.0 dB1.40PeakCRITICAL cut. With this much bass boost above, 280 Hz must be aggressively reduced or everything becomes an indistinct muddy wall. This is the "clean bass" frequency.
5550 Hz−1.5 dB1.80PeakExtends the mud-clearing operation upward. Opens the midrange for dialogue to sit inside the massive bass and treble without being buried.
62,000 Hz+3.0 dB2.00PeakDialogue anchor — even in extreme cinema mode, voices must cut through. This presence boost prevents the cinematic wash from burying characters.
73,800 Hz+2.5 dB2.00PeakUpper presence for consonants and musical detail. Adds definition to the sonic picture — everything is large but still clear and articulate.
86,500 Hz−4.5 dB2.00PeakDeepest harshness cut of all presets. At extreme volume and bass levels, the MH89's 6.5k peak becomes intolerable. Cut hard and cut decisively.
910,500 Hz+3.0 dB1.40PeakCinematic air — completely above the harshness zone. Creates the sense of a large acoustic space. Orchestra breathes, strings shimmer.
1016,000 Hz+2.0 dB1.00High ShelfFinal extension shelf — pushes the 40mm driver to its absolute frequency limit. Gives the MH89 the "open" quality of more expensive headphones in this range.
✓ Pros
Most immersive and theatrical of all presets
Bass impact is physically present
Orchestral scores sound massive
Voices still audible despite extreme tuning
✗ Cons
Highest power draw — check if source can handle it
Not for daily use — fatigue after long sessions
Poor quality audio files will sound worse (noise amplified)
Must use at lower system volumes than other presets
Peace GUI Setup Steps
01Set preamp to −6.5 dB — mandatory. This preset pushes the signal harder than any other.
02Enable Prevent Clipping checkbox in Peace's bottom section before any playback test.
03Test at 40% system volume first. If clean, increase to 50%. Do not exceed 60% with this preset.
04Best tested with: Your Name (Kimi no Na wa) — rain scene, or Demon Slayer Mugen Train theatrical cut.
05Save as Extreme Cinema.
⚙ Compressor (Required)
Threshold−18 dB
Ratio3.5:1
Attack18 ms
Release280 ms
NoteCompressor is not optional here — it prevents the large bass boosts from clipping on dynamic content
🎭 Dolby Atmos Compatibility
ModeMovie
RiskHigh — reduce preamp to −8 dB
NoteAtmos + this preset is "ludicrous mode" — amazing but verify no distortion carefully
07
LATE NIGHT LOW-VOLUME MODE
Quiet late-night watching — full sound at 15–30% volume, no waking anyone up, no ear strain
★ Night Anime Ambient
Preamp
−4.0 dB
Listening Volume
15–35% System
EQ Band Configuration — Copy to Peace GUI
Fletcher-Munson Principle: At low volume, the human ear loses sensitivity to bass (below 150 Hz) and high treble (above 8 kHz) much faster than midrange. This preset compensates by boosting both extremes aggressively, while also sharpening the vocal midrange — so the sound feels full and natural even at bedroom-whisper volumes.
#FrequencyGainQFilterEngineering Reason
140 Hz+5.0 dB0.65Low ShelfAt 20% volume the ear hears almost no sub-bass. This extreme compensation restores the "felt" quality that makes anime feel immersive even at whisper levels.
2100 Hz+4.0 dB1.00PeakBass warmth perception drops drastically at low volume. This boost restores it. Without it, anime music sounds thin and lifeless at night.
3280 Hz−2.5 dB1.40PeakClean the mud from the bass boost above. At low volume mud is even more noticeable — careful tuning here keeps bass tight.
4700 Hz−1.0 dB2.00PeakThe "loudness contour" dip — mimics the classic vintage "loudness" button that scooped mids to compensate for low-volume ear response curves.
51,800 Hz+2.5 dB2.00PeakVoice presence restored at low volume — the ear's most sensitive range. Dialogue is always intelligible even at very quiet levels.
63,200 Hz+3.5 dB1.80PeakStrong consonant boost — at quiet volumes, high-frequency consonants ("s", "t", "k") are the first things lost. This restores Japanese speech intelligibility.
76,500 Hz−2.0 dB2.00PeakEven at low volume the MH89's harshness peak is present. At night when everything is quiet, this peak actually becomes MORE noticeable — cut it.
810,000 Hz+4.0 dB1.40PeakTreble perception drops steeply at low volume (Fletcher-Munson). This large boost restores the "air" and openness that disappears when listening quietly.
914,000 Hz+3.0 dB1.20PeakHigh treble restoration — the final step in the loudness compensation curve. At night volumes, this brings back sparkle and naturalness.
1016,000 Hz+2.0 dB0.80High ShelfExtension — the full top-end loudness compensation shelf. Together with bands 8 and 9, this gives the MH89 excellent perceived fidelity at low listening levels.
✓ Pros
Sounds full and natural at very low volumes
Dialogue remains perfectly clear
Bass doesn't disappear at quiet levels
Zero fatigue — ideal for sleepy late-night watching
✗ Cons
Sounds aggressively bright at normal/high volumes — switch presets
Requires careful preamp setup — clipping risk at >50% volume
Peace GUI Setup Steps
01Set preamp to −4.0 dB.
02This preset is designed for 15–35% system volume. Verify your Windows volume is in this range before testing.
03It will sound "too bright" at higher volumes — that's correct. The extreme treble boost is designed to compensate for low-volume hearing loss.
04Optionally, lower your anime player's internal volume to 70% and raise Windows to 40% for better dynamic range at quiet levels.
05Save as Late Night Mode.
⚙ Compressor (Highly Recommended)
Threshold−12 dB
Ratio5:1 (high ratio)
Attack10 ms
Release150 ms
PurposePrevents sudden loud scenes from jarring you awake. Reduces dynamic range at night.
🎭 Dolby Atmos Compatibility
ModeOFF — recommended
NoteAtmos adds processing overhead and its bass enhancement clashes with the loudness compensation curve here
08
COMPETITIVE GAMING + ANIME HYBRID
Gaming sessions + anime breaks — footstep clarity, positional audio, dialogue-ready
★ Competitive Anime Action
Preamp
−4.0 dB
Listening Volume
55–70% System
EQ Band Configuration — Copy to Peace GUI
#FrequencyGainQFilterEngineering Reason
150 Hz+1.5 dB0.80Low ShelfControlled sub — enough for anime impact but not excessive. In gaming, sub-bass bloat obscures footstep frequencies. Minimal lift only.
2120 Hz−2.0 dB1.20PeakCritical gaming cut — upper bass excess makes footsteps boomy and imprecise. Clean bass = better ability to hear and locate enemies spatially.
3280 Hz−2.5 dB1.40PeakLower-mid cut improves overall clarity. In games this removes the "cardboard" sound that hides directional audio detail in complex environments.
4800 Hz+1.0 dB2.00PeakWarmth recovery — ensures anime dialogue and game VO doesn't sound thin after the bass cuts above. Keeps dialogue natural.
51,500 Hz+2.0 dB2.00PeakFootstep frequency zone. In games, the crunch of footsteps on different surfaces (gravel, wood, metal) lives here. Also excellent for anime vocal body.
62,800 Hz+3.0 dB1.80PeakDual purpose: gaming gunshot cracks and reload sounds are sharp here; anime dialogue consonants are equally boosted. Best of both worlds.
74,200 Hz+4.0 dB2.00PeakThe key gaming frequency. Footstep transients, ability sound effects, enemy movement cues — all sharpened. Also sharpens anime consonants for clarity.
86,500 Hz−2.5 dB2.00PeakTame harshness — we boosted a lot above this. Without this cut, long gaming sessions become fatiguing. Particularly important for gaming's repetitive audio.
910,000 Hz+2.0 dB1.40PeakSpatial cue frequency — helps with gaming positional audio (above/below, distance) and also adds anime OST air. Safe zone above harshness.
1015,000 Hz+1.0 dB1.20High ShelfGentle extension — slight high-shelf for natural top-end in both gaming environments and anime soundtracks. Not aggressive.
✓ Pros
Footsteps are precise and directionally clear
Anime dialogue remains intelligible
Single preset covers both activities
Balanced — no extreme adjustments
Non-fatiguing for long gaming + watching sessions
✗ Cons
Not as immersive as action-specific preset for anime
Not as competitive as a pure gaming EQ
Bass is intentionally modest — may disappoint bass lovers
Peace GUI Setup Steps
01Set preamp to −4.0 dB.
02Band 7 at 4.2 kHz is the most important band in this preset for gaming. Verify it's set to exactly +4.0 dB.
03Test in-game first: walk on different surfaces (grass, concrete, metal). Footsteps should be clearly distinct and "crunchy."
04Then test with an anime scene. Dialogue should be clear and the sound full, if slightly leaner than the anime-specific presets.
05Save as Gaming Anime Hybrid.
⚙ Compressor (Skip for Gaming)
GamingDo NOT use — compressor blurs transients needed for spatial audio
Anime modeOptional: Threshold −20 dB, Ratio 2:1
🎭 Dolby Atmos Compatibility
Gaming ModeAtmos for Headphones — GOOD
Anime ModeMovie mode — works well
NoteReduce preamp to −5.5 dB when using Atmos
Quick Reference — All Presets at a Glance
# Preset Name Preamp Bass Profile Treble Profile Best Situation Volume
01All-Rounder Anime−3.5 dBModerateBalancedDaily anime watching50–65%
02Dialogue Clarity−4.5 dBReducedTamedLoud BGM, quiet voices50–70%
03Action Shōnen−5.5 dBMaximumAiryFight scenes, OSTs45–60%
04SoL Romance−2.5 dBWarmSmooth/DarkEmotional anime, piano55–70%
05Dark Psychological−3.5 dBAtmosphericDetailed/AiryThriller, ambient detail55–65%
06Extreme Cinema−6.5 dBMassiveExtendedAnime films, specials40–55%
07Late Night Mode−4.0 dBBoostedBoostedQuiet late-night watching15–35%
08Gaming+Anime Hybrid−4.0 dBCleanSharpGaming + anime sessions55–70%