![]() The RX unit is four by two inches (a bit bigger than a beefy flip phone), and also rocks a shiny black faceplate with a volume knob, a smaller dial to adjust audio / comm channel mixing, and power and bass boost buttons. Around back, there's optical input and output ports, a power plug, two USB ports, and an auxiliary 3.5mm connection for a PS3 chat adaptor cable (sold separately). Power and Dolby Headphone on/off buttons and the company logo are all that break up the onyx facade. The TX base station is about four inches square (roughly the size of a 2nd gen Apple TV) and its glossy black topside attracts fingerprints like it was designed to do so. A box covered in graffiti and gaming graphics broadcasts Astro's street-chic design aesthetic, and it unfolds to reveal the Mixamp TX (transmitter), Mixamp RX (receiver), and a couple of compartments holding all the accoutrement you'll need to get started. Both the device and its packaging have a premium look and feel - which makes sense considering how much going wireless the Astro way costs. First impressions are important, and Astro's Mixamp 5.8 doesn't disappoint.
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