I have several pairs of high-end earbuds, Sony XM5, Denon PerL Pro, Devialet Gemini 11 and Sennheiser Momentum 4 to name a few. The Noble Audio FoKus Triumph are better. They produce a well-balanced sound from the top end to the bottom end, with a wide Soundstage and excellent instrument placement within the soundstage. Bass is on par with the Sony XM5 which I believe have one of the deepest low end on a pair of buds I ever heard. Noble managed to produce a deep low end and kept the top end and mids well balanced. I highly recommend the Noble FoKus Triumph if you're looking for the best sounding buds currently on the market.
The bass is present but not bloated. The mids and highs are unbelievably separated with this new MEMS technology. Add some color with the EQ and it can really shine whether you want more vocals present or more bass. The separation is insane. Way better than the other 10 TWS iems I own. I initially had an issue with hissing in my first pair, after the exchange not a problem.
The one thing I don't like is the USBc port. It could have been done differently. It makes it a pain to travel with because I need to use the adapter.
If you have a device that supports the AptX or LDAC codec, these are probably the best sounding TWS earbuds you can buy. The soundstage and clarity these have is unrivaled by anyhing else on the market, provided you aren't using AAC or another low quality codec.
I haven't seen this mentioned in reviews and I have no idea why no one at Noble raised this during development/design, but the USB-C port on the charging case is so far recessed that most standard USB-C cables do not have a long enough connector to actually charge the case. To their credit Noble does include an adapter that will make any USB-C cable compatible, but it definitely will be an annoyance to have to remember to carry around an extra little dongle if you need to charge your case away from home.
The detail and soundstaging from these earphones put every other TW earphones to shame. The pluck, scratch and resonance of strings from double bass to mandolin is remarkable, as is the shimmer and brush stroke of cymbals in a drum kit.
The earphones offer great fit and comfortable and easy, reliable controls.