Let me tell you, unboxing this monster felt like Christmas morning. The sheer weight of the box (seriously, recruit a friend) hinted at the quality inside – and boy, did it deliver. Those dual 10" wood subwoofers? Pure bass heaven. No flabby, window-rattling nonsense here – just tight, punchy lows that make action scenes in 'Independence Day' feel like you're dodging alien lasers.
Setting up took 30 minutes, but the real magic happened when I fired up DTS:X Neural. Bullets whizzed over my head, spaceships rumbled behind me – my medium-sized living room transformed into a mini IMAX. Though fair warning: this system demands space. Keep those rear satellites 6ft away or they'll bully your eardrums.
Movie nights became an event. The DSP modes make 'IT' creepier and 'XXX' more explosive, though I keep bass at 2 to avoid neighbor complaints (apartment dwellers, beware). Dialogue cuts through crystal clear – no more subtitles for mumbling actors!
Now the quirks: those stock RCA cables belong in a museum. Swapped them for Canare star quads and unlocked richer highs. Music purists might grumble about the presets (where's my custom EQ?), but for Spotify jam sessions, it's surprisingly nimble. Heard details in 'Rocket Man' I'd missed for decades.
Is it perfect? Nah. I wish Nakamichi offered wired sub connections and finer bass controls. But for under $1,500? This 9.2.4 setup shames soundbars twice its price. My movie collection never sounded so alive – and my local theater just lost a customer.