Motorola Vervebuds 200 Review

Motorola Vervebuds 200 Review
Sporty wireless earbuds that sound better than they look. We review the Motorola Vervebuds 200.

Should I Buy The Motorola Vervebuds 200?

Pros
  • Good sound
  • safe to wear in the rain
  • accurate video syncing
Cons
  • Ugly design
  • poor call quality
Our Verdict
  • If you care about how your devices look, then the questionable aesthetics of the Vervebuds 200 will be a problem. Get past that though and you have a reasonably priced pair of true wireless earbuds that deliver good sound and work well with video content.
  • Call quality is a problem, as the audio doesn’t really pass muster, but for running, at the gym or just general everyday use the Vervebuds 200 have much to offer.

Price When Reviewed

  • $65.99
Many people will associate Motorola with smartphones rather than wireless earbuds, but the company has a range of options for those who want to leave wires behind. We take a look at a budget pair with a sporty flair. Read on for our review of the Vervebuds 200.

Price & Availability

You can pick up a pair of Vervebuds 200 from Argos or Amazon for £39.99. Strangely, the product isn’t currently listed on the Motorola UK site, although you can buy the Vervebuds 500 but the link takes you through to EE which offer the headphones for £5p/m for 11 months, with £9.99 payable up front.

US customers can buy the earbuds from Amazon for $65.99 but again the product is absent from the Motorola site.

Design & Build Quality

Coming in a compact charging-case with matt-grey livery, the Vervebuds 200 are a bit lacking in terms of style when compared to the Redmi Airdots or Tronsmart Spunky Pro, although they definitely have a better name than the latter.
Motorola Vervebuds 200 Review
The main chambers have large, plastic clickable buttons on-top emblazoned with the Motorola logo surrounded by a circle of little dots. It’s not the most attractive look we’ve come across. This theme continues with grey silicone bumpers that help make the buds more comfortable when in your ears. Motorola includes three different sizes of these in the box so you can choose which one fits you the best and there’s also three sizes of bud covers for the same purpose.

The manual suggests twisting the buds gently to get them seated in your ears and while this works, they do seem to reach down the canal slightly further than some others we’ve tested. This can be uncomfortable at first, but the lightness of the Vervebuds mean you soon get used to the feeling.

The buttons allow control over playback, answering phone calls, activating the voice assistant on your phone, but not volume, so you’ll still need your main device nearby if you want to make any level adjustments.
Motorola Vervebuds 200 Review

An IPX5 waterproof rating means you’ll be safe to wear them while running in the rain, and the included neck-strap should ensure that you won’t lose one if it pops out while you’re going for that personal best. It's an unusual inclusion.

Sound Quality & Performance

While the looks might be nothing to write home about, the audio is surprisingly good. Tracks are clear, bright and have enough bass to stop things sounding too tinny. Spoken word content is particularly enjoyable, but the Vervebuds 200 acquit themselves well with pretty much all content. 

Video syncing is excellent, with no noticeable delay when streaming content from Netflix, YouTube or other services. This is a bonus as it means you can catch up on your favourite shows or movies while travelling, all without developing a twitch from lip-sync aberrations.  

Connecting via Bluetooth, the buds were reasonably consistent on automatically connecting when taking them out of the case. There were a few times when we had to trigger this manually on our phone or tablet though, with occasions where they didn’t show up on the available device list at all. Putting them back in the charging case and then removing them again seemed to kick start things.
Motorola Vervebuds 200 Review
The controls worked consistently, although there a few combinations of clicks to remember and it can be hard to get the timing right for the triple clicks at times. If you stick to one click for play/pause/answer phone and two clicks for skipping forward on tracks, then things should be dandy.

Call quality was a let-down, as the recipient reported that audio was distorted, crackly, and dropped out regularly. In a pinch you could take a call, but we wouldn’t advise using these for anything more than that.

Battery life is par for the course, with the buds lasting for just shy of four hours on a single charge. The case can replenish them two to three times, but you’ll need to wait the best part of three hours for the buds to get back to 100 percent.

Verdict

First impressions don’t flatter the Vervebuds 200 as the plasticky and boring aesthetic fail to impress. This changes when audio is played and the results are very pleasing for most music and spoken word content, plus the video-syncing is excellent.

Call quality is frankly awful and there’s no volume controls on the buttons, but if you want pair of true wireless earbuds for sport or general use, and don’t mind how they look, then the Vervebuds are certainly worth investigating.

Specs

  • 8mm speakers
  • Bluetooth 5
  • IPX5
  • Clickable buttons for media control
  • Microphone
  • Charging case
  • 58mm x 37mm x 32 mm
  • 49.9g
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About Wanni Arachchige Udara Madusanka Perera

Hey, I'm Perera! I will try to give you technology reviews(mobile,gadgets,smart watch & other technology things), Automobiles, News and entertainment for built up your knowledge.
Motorola Vervebuds 200 Review Motorola Vervebuds 200 Review Reviewed by Wanni Arachchige Udara Madusanka Perera on August 10, 2021 Rating: 5

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