Lenovo's Aurora GH15 is a $37 wireless gaming headset with quad-mode connectivity
Lenovo has launched the Aurora GH15, a wireless gaming headset priced at 249 yuan (around $37), currently sold exclusively in China via JD.com. At that price, it undercuts rivals like the HyperX Cloud III (~$80) while offering a feature set that most budget headsets can't match. The catch: no US or UK release has been announced.
The specs
The GH15's headline feature is quad-mode connectivity. It pairs over Bluetooth, a standard 3.5mm jack, a 2.4GHz USB-A dongle, or a 2.4GHz USB-C dongle — meaning it works with a PC, gaming console, smartphone, or Nintendo Switch without adapters. On 2.4GHz wireless, latency drops to 25ms, which is on par with more expensive headsets and fast enough that in-game audio stays in sync with the action on screen.
The 40mm drivers are tuned for gaming, and the headset carries a 1000mAh battery — larger than the 500–800mAh found in most competitors. Charging is via USB-C. RGB rings on each earcup sync with other Lenovo Legion peripherals through Lenovo's software. The 360° detachable mic uses ENC (Environmental Noise Cancellation) to filter background noise during calls or voice chat. The headband is stainless steel, the earcups are protein leather, and the whole unit folds flat for transport. It comes in black and white.
The market reality
For US and UK buyers, the GH15 is interesting on paper but out of reach in practice. The budget wireless tier is already contested — Gaming PC Guru places headsets like the SteelSeries Arctis Nova 1 and HyperX Cloud III as the benchmark at the $50–100 level. The GH15 beats them on price and matches them on latency, but zero Western retail presence has been confirmed, per Gizmochina.
The Aurora RGB sync is also a differentiator that only pays off if you're already in the Lenovo Legion ecosystem. Against platform-agnostic competitors, it's a narrower selling point.
Lenovo Aurora GH15 wireless gaming headset in black, showing RGB earcup rings and detachable microphone.
If Lenovo does bring the GH15 to Western markets, the price-to-feature ratio would make it genuinely competitive. For now, it's a China-first product with no confirmed export timeline.