Now that gaming is such a known and celebrated part of the world, and has stopped being portrayed as a negative hobby, aspects of it have become standardised and locked in as essential parts of the activity. Across media, adverts, videos, and streams, gaming now has an expected portrayal with standard steps. You boot up your console or your PC “setup”, covering your aesthetically arranged desk in an RGB glow, settle into a comfy chair, put on your outside-world-blocking headset, and get immersed in another reality.
When you have to do any of those parts differently to that stereotyped (and marketed) pattern, it does kind of feel like you’re doing it wrongly.
* By “can’t wear”, I don’t mean that wearing a headset is completely impossible. It’s more that, due to a combination of hearing/audio processing issues and sensory oddities, wearing headsets or earphones is often very uncomfortable. Listening to game audio and chat audio simultaneously through headphones – achieving the “immersed” type of experience that is portrayed as the ideal and default way to game – is not the way gaming works for me. As a result I’ve spent a lot of time looking for ways to have an audio setup that means sociable gaming can just work for me.
Now that I’ve tried a lot of different options and finally found one that works for me, it makes sense for me to write down the types of alternative options and their general pros and cons to hopefully help anyone in the same boat. (I’ve spun off my specifc limitations/caveats, and the options that did and didn’t work for me, into its own post).





