Hit play and let the FIFINE AmpliGame 2.0 speakers pull you in—clear cues, tight impacts, and RGB that reacts with you. Tap the volume or mute in an instant, sync the RGB to your vibe, and drop into the action with speakers.
Take the immersion into another league
When gaming, even for the lightest headset, there’s at least more than 100g of burden weighing on your head, even for the most comfortable earbuds, your hearing is going to get fatigued quite easily. To always stay sharp to the critical game audio, get yourself a pair of speakers. Not the portable Bluetooth one or the soundbar, but at least the 2.0 channel ones that give you much better imaging or immersion but at the same time no headache or numbness.
Even with this pair of speakers, you won’t have a chance to deafen your colleagues in offices or earrap your roommates in dormitory, since it’s the best fit for your own secret gaming studio! Though it’s not the 2.1 system that comes with a super punchy and bassy subwoofer, the loudness isn’t absent, you can have it all to yourself.
The 2-inch drivers aren’t the most powerful ones, which peaks at 6W, but in your little bedroom, it can get really loud. If the loudness is the issue of your headset, this 2.0 speaker can get way louder than you expect on a small desk setup. But the volume shouldn’t be the only thing that you should be concerned about, how the sound quality stacks up at the highest volume is what really matters. As for the case of this AmpliGame A20, it almost doesn’t have any noticeable sound distortion or harshness at the highest volume.
Just in case you get your eardrums hurt without quickly dropping the loudness, there are volume controls integrated into the lower part of the left speaker. No obtrusive dials to spoil the design, and you still have the convenience of making volume adjustments on the fly without an alt-tab out of the full-screen gaming. The buttons on the speaker aren’t controlling the output volume from the computer system, which means you can give a few extra dB boosts to the audio even if the system volume is set to 100%. It can really go beyond your expectations in terms of loudness.
Not all swagger, also practicality
The shape of it doesn’t fall into cliche either. Aiming at gaming, but without an overdone appearance crammed full of RGB, it’s easier to match pretty much any setup. Not even close to over-style, but it does spice up the look a little bit with its triangle shape in the front and the sleek finish mesh panel on each front panel.
And just because of the unique shape, they don’t look awkward at all when they’re placed horizontally. The possibility of different placement could be quite useful if you’re someone with a cramped desk. Just put it down and shove it underneath the computer screen, and then a little more space is saved up!
If you constantly move your gaming setup, leave alone those multi-channel speakers, just compared with the 2.1 that included a bulky subwoofer, then the simplicity of a 2.0 speaker system would beat the rest out of the water. Being easily taken away doesn’t necessarily mean the build is flimsy. In the league of 2-inch 2.0 channels, with around 930 grams of weight, it’s one of the heavyweight contenders.
With the size of 5*3.3*3.8 (L*W*G in inches), it’s still a pretty compact PC speaker in the first place. And being a pair of active speakers, you don’t have to bother with an extra chunky amplifier to get it to work properly. Plug in the undetachable USB Type-A cable from the left speaker to activate the whole system, 5V USB power from your computer, which is all the power it needs! Then hook up the 3.5mm TRS cable to the headphone jack of your PC for the audio transmission, turn on the system by pressing the power button on the right speaker for 3 seconds, and you’re ready to rock and roll!
You may notice there’s still a cable linking between the left and right speakers, the length of it is about 60 inches. Leave alone the dual-monitor setup, even if you’re using an ultra-wide one, it covers the length from the left to the right of the screen without any problem! It may struggle quite a bit if you’re interested in using it as the home theater system for your TV in the living room, though you can place them horizontally to round the problem. And the splitter cable for the USB powering and 3.5mm audio transmission is even longer. The 70-foot length is so long that even if your setup is large you shouldn’t have a problem of routing to your PC.

There’s still an Ace up the sleeves, the power button also known as quick mute that you rarely find on other $50ish 2.0 speakers! You can long press the volume dial to turn down the loudness in a row, but it’s never fast enough, especially if it’s an extreme situation from max to zero, like you’re getting fully immersive in gaming but need to quiet everything up in a second just to hear the cue from your mom in the real world. This press-to-mute button is just a lifesaver.

Look the part of 2.0 speaker,
but set itself apart from the range
As a 2.0 channel speaker, the first thing that comes to your head should be immersion. The AmpliGame A20 does that and does that well! Because of the way how the sound from the speakers interacts with the environment, you won’t be too surprised to find the separation of the left and right channels is much better than you get from even a pair of open-back headphones, leaving alone the closed-back one that you always see and maybe using. What it really excels is to let you hear some excellent details in the highs of footsteps, background pop music, or the spoken dialogue from the game. Unlike the sound with a lot of clarity loss from internal speakers of laptops or those 2.0 ones that can’t handle the higher frequencies well.

Despite the full-range drivers that you find on most 2.0 systems, the one on the A20 is “fuller”, which gives a slightly more noticeable amount of low-frequency energy to the sound. Something is definitely hard to find on every budget speaker, also something that makes the real difference between a proper external speaker and the built-in one of the computer. It’s not the bass from a 2.1 system that can shake your body every time you fire a machine gun or rev the muscle car in the game, but slightly more vibration when the bomb dropped in the battlefield or the car roaring furiously in the circuit. It can definitely take your immersion to the next level in any game.
Specifications
| Output Connection | 3.5mm TRS jack (for audio transmission) Type-A USB jack (for speaker powering) |
|---|---|
| USB Power Consumption | Voltage: 5±0.25 V
Current: 500mA-1A |
| Weight | 934g |
| Cable Length | 5 feet undetachable cable between speakers
6 feet USB power & audio transmission splitter cable from left speaker |
| Speaker Size | 5"*3.3"*3.8" (L*W*G) each |
| Output Power | Total watts (RMS) 4W |
| Frequency Response | 130Hz-18kHz |
| Shipping Weight | 1.2 kg |