The point of buying a new sound card is lost on most of us. Almost all PCs
now come with onboard sound capabilities, often in 5.1 surround sound, so why
should anyone pay more for another sound card?
Our answer to that question is Creative's X-Fi range of PCI cards, based on
the company's new X-Fi sound processor, which offers better sound reproduction
all round.
While most sound cards are aimed at gamers, the X-Fi has three modes -
gaming, entertainment and audio creation - each of which optimises certain
aspects. In gaming mode, more 'voices' are available, so in-game sounds are more
detailed and more realistic.
In entertainment mode (as in the other modes, in fact), the card attempts to
repair damaged or badly encoded sound files and improve their quality, and
CMSS-3D technology remixes the sound for the PC's speaker set-up (so a stereo
track sounds good on surround sound speakers and a 5.1 DVD soundtrack sounds
good on headphones).
Finally, audio creation mode has numerous tweaks and features for those
creating music on the PC.
It is fair to say that the card and CMSS-3D make a big difference, and
generally sound is noticeably better on the X-Fi even compared with Creative's
previous best card, the Audigy 4.
There are other cards available in the X-Fi range, which come with more
options for plugging in devices or instruments, or more memory for samples, but
the Xtreme Music is a good place to start for most users.
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