And as befits almost any TWS earbuds, the Soundcore Liberty Air 2 Pro can use their microphones for more than just noise cancellation and voice communications. All microphones in the same application can be switched to skip external sounds. A useful thing if you need to understand what is happening outside. After all, even passive noise isolation is at a good level here (provided that the ear cushions are correctly selected, of course).
Sound
The first thing that I involuntarily drew attention to when I first listened to music through these headphones – distinct bass and sub-bass sounds. Low frequencies do not turn into an incomprehensible mess and do not overlap the rest. The same goes for the rest of the frequencies. The sound is well detailed, even those musical parts that you simply will not hear in headphones of a class a little lower are clearly audible.
This is facilitated by the not the simplest design of the headphones, although it would seem that they are ordinary TWS plugs. Above the drivers, there are as many as ten hardened nano-plates, which increase the frequency coverage and increase the clarity of the reproduced sounds.
Yes, someone would like to see support for LDAC and aptX codecs in these headphones, but for everyday use (videos on YouTube, music from streaming services), even the standard SBC codec will be enough. And do not forget that the headphones use Bluetooth 5.0 with not the smallest bandwidth.
Autonomy
From a single charge, the Soundcore Liberty Air 2 Pro can work for about seven to eight hours, despite the fact that all this time you will be using a rather energy-intensive noise reduction mode. This agrees with what the manufacturer promises, but in fact, you will rarely come across headphones discharged to zero, because they charge impressively quickly in the case.