🔥 Best Pick This Week: Best PC Gaming Audio Setup KSA 2025 — DAC + Open-Back + USB Mic Stack Read Comparison →

Amazon Associates Program Disclosure

As an Amazon Associate, Kazazone earns from qualifying purchases.

Here’s the thing nobody tells you — a headset is great until it’s 3 PM, the cousins are over, and everyone wants to hear the Call of Duty intro play through the TV. That’s a speaker moment, not a headset moment.

Gaming speakers in KSA in 2025 are in a weird spot. Great options at every tier, but most guides recommend the wrong ones for Saudi rooms (think big, tiled, echoey). We picked three that actually sound right in a Riyadh apartment — at three very different budgets.

Best Gaming Speakers in Saudi Arabia 2025

Your speakers need to do three things in a Saudi room: fill the space without blasting the neighbors, sound clean on both games and YouTube, and not cost a fortune just because they say “gaming” on the box. Here’s what actually works — one audiophile-grade pick, one gaming-feature-loaded mid-tier, and one budget option that shouldn’t sound this good.

Price Range
SAR 229–1,099

Room Size
Desk to majlis

Best For
PC + PS5

Kazazone Verdict

The Audioengine A2+ is the one most people should stretch for — real bookshelf speakers with a built-in DAC that sound incredible on games, music, and movies. The Logitech G560 LIGHTSYNC at SAR 799 is the RGB-happy gaming pick with genuine 240W punch for larger rooms. If you’re on a tight budget, the Creative Pebble V3 at SAR 229 is frankly ridiculous value — USB-C, clean sound, small footprint.

Audiophile Pick
Audioengine A2+ Wireless

Audioengine A2+ Wireless

Real bookshelf speakers, built-in DAC, Bluetooth aptX
★★★★★ 4.7/5

Let’s be real for a second — the A2+ aren’t “gaming speakers”. They’re proper bookshelf speakers with a built-in 24-bit DAC that happen to make gaming sound better than anything with “gaming” printed on the box. The difference the first time you play Red Dead Redemption 2 through these versus standard 2.0 gaming speakers is genuinely startling. Dialogue is clearer. Horse footsteps have weight. The soundtrack breathes.

What makes them work in a Saudi room: they have enough low-end to feel cinematic without needing a subwoofer that’ll rattle your neighbors’ majlis. The Bluetooth aptX means you can pair your phone, play PS5 via USB directly into the DAC, and keep your PC hooked up to the RCA inputs — all three sources live, just switch on the remote. The cabinet quality is the giveaway. These feel like a SAR 2,500 speaker built to a SAR 1,099 price point.

Downsides? No RGB, no gaming app, no EQ software. You’re paying for sound quality, not features. And the bass is clean but not thumping — if you want windows rattling, you’ll need to add a subwoofer (Audioengine’s S8 is SAR 1,600 extra). Wallah, for music-first gamers though, these are the one to beat.

Pros
  • Real bookshelf speakers — audiophile quality
  • Built-in 24-bit DAC — clean PC/PS5 audio
  • Bluetooth aptX + USB + RCA — three sources
  • Cabinet feels SAR 2,500+ build quality
Cons
  • No RGB or gaming software features
  • Bass is clean but not cinematic
  • Wants a sub for gaming explosions
  • Cables aren’t long — desk placement matters
Power 60W total (30W peak/ch)
Drivers 2.75″ Kevlar woofer + 0.75″ tweeter
Inputs USB-B, RCA, 3.5mm, Bluetooth aptX
Best for Desktop + small-to-mid rooms
Right for you if
You care about how games and music sound, you have a proper desk setup, and you want speakers you won’t have to upgrade in three years. These are a buy-once, use-for-a-decade purchase.

Gaming-First Pick
Logitech G560 LIGHTSYNC

Logitech G560 LIGHTSYNC

2.1 system, 240W peak, DTS:X Ultra, game-reactive RGB
★★★★☆ 4.4/5

The G560 is the speaker system you buy when you want your gaming to feel like gaming. 240W peak power means these fill a big Saudi living room easily, the included subwoofer handles explosions properly without turning into boomy mud, and the DTS:X Ultra surround emulation works surprisingly well — positional audio in Apex and Warzone is noticeably better than a standard 2.0 setup.

The LIGHTSYNC RGB is either a selling point or a gimmick depending on who you ask. The game-reactive mode — where the speakers change color based on what’s happening on screen — is actually fun in games like Fortnite or GTA. If you’re gaming late at night with the main lights off in your قروب الربع setup, it adds real atmosphere. Dismissive reviewers miss the point; it’s optional and it’s free if you don’t want it.

Downsides: G HUB software is required for most features and it still has Windows 11 quirks. The speakers are plastic — adequate, but not premium. Music playback is good, not great, compared to real bookshelf speakers. And placement matters — these are front-firing with rear-firing design cues that need a few inches of breathing room behind them. Ya salam, but as a dedicated PC gaming setup? Hard to beat at SAR 799.

Pros
  • 240W peak — fills large rooms easily
  • Dedicated subwoofer — cinematic bass
  • DTS:X Ultra positional audio works
  • Game-reactive LIGHTSYNC RGB
Cons
  • G HUB software is required
  • Plastic build — adequate, not premium
  • Music quality good, not bookshelf-tier
  • Needs breathing room behind speakers
Power 240W peak (120W RMS)
Configuration 2.1 with subwoofer
Inputs USB, 3.5mm, Bluetooth
Best for Larger rooms + gaming-first setups
Right for you if
You game in a larger room, you want real subwoofer bass for explosions and engines, and the RGB + surround features matter to you. PC-primary setups get the most out of DTS:X Ultra.

Budget Pick
Creative Pebble V3

Creative Pebble V3

8W RMS, USB-C, Bluetooth 5.0, tiny footprint
★★★★☆ 4.4/5

Let that sink in — a sub-SAR 250 pair of speakers that are genuinely good. The Pebble V3 succeeded where dozens of cheap desktop speakers failed because Creative didn’t try to cheat the laws of physics. They made them small, powered by USB-C (a single cable to your PC or PS5), and tuned the 2.25″ drivers for clarity over thump. The result is speakers that sound better than they have any right to at this price.

For a desk setup in a bedroom or a student’s dorm, these are nearly perfect. Bluetooth 5.0 means you can pair your phone while the USB-C cable is still feeding audio from your PC. The spherical angled design points the speakers up at your ears — small detail, big difference. And they take up almost zero desk real estate.

The tradeoffs are obvious. No subwoofer means bass is present but not felt. Maximum volume is enough for a bedroom, not a majlis. And the plastic construction is basic — these won’t feel premium, because they aren’t. But for SAR 229? The math doesn’t even work. You can’t build better for this price. Period.

Pros
  • Genuinely good sound for SAR 229
  • USB-C — single cable to PC or PS5
  • Bluetooth 5.0 + USB simultaneously
  • Tiny footprint, spherical angled design
Cons
  • No subwoofer — bass is thin
  • Volume tops out at bedroom levels
  • Plastic construction is basic
  • Cables aren’t long
Power 8W RMS (16W peak)
Drivers 2.25″ full-range
Inputs USB-C, 3.5mm, Bluetooth 5.0
Best for Desk + bedroom setups
Right for you if
You’re buying your first real speakers, you’re setting up for a student in college housing, or you just want something better than built-in monitor speakers without the drama. A single USB-C cable and you’re done.

Hidden Costs Nobody Tells You About
  • Saudi rooms have reflective surfaces everywhere. Tiled floors, glass coffee tables, big open majlis spaces — they all make speakers sound harsh and echoey. Budget a SAR 50–150 rug under your desk (or acoustic panels for serious setups). Makes a bigger sonic difference than upgrading from Pebble V3 to G560.
  • Subwoofers are the silent upgrade. Adding a subwoofer to the Audioengine A2+ (SAR 1,600 for the S8) or keeping the G560’s included sub transforms the experience. If you skipped to Pebble V3 and find you miss bass, Creative’s own T100 system is the upgrade path (~SAR 450).
  • USB-powered speakers can pull noise from cheap USB cables or ports. If you hear a faint whine or hum, swap the USB cable before blaming the speakers. Front-panel USB ports on PC cases are often the culprit — use back-panel motherboard USB.
  • Amazon.sa vs noon price swings. The G560 has ranged SAR 749–899 in 2025. Audioengine A2+ swings 50–80 riyals either direction. Check both before buying, especially during White Friday and Saudi National Day sales.
  • Cable length is the silent pain. The A2+ stock cables are short. Budget SAR 30–70 for longer RCA cables if your PS5 or TV isn’t right next to your speakers. Don’t discover this on unboxing day.

Things Saudi Gamers Should Know Before Buying Speakers

Saudi apartments echo. Tile floors, glass, bare walls — they make every speaker sound worse than it should. A simple rug under your desk or sofa can make a SAR 229 pair of Pebbles sound like SAR 500 speakers. Before you upgrade the speakers, upgrade the room. Same rule applies in the majlis.

Neighbor acoustics are real. In most Saudi apartment buildings, concrete walls block highs and mids well but bass travels. If you’re in a shared building, the G560’s subwoofer will be felt downstairs at volume. The A2+ without a sub is actually a better neighbor. Keep this in mind for late-night sessions.

PS5 audio works differently from PC audio. The PS5 outputs audio through HDMI to your TV or monitor, and you need to route it out of there to your speakers — usually via the TV’s 3.5mm jack, optical out, or HDMI eARC. The Audioengine A2+ handles this easily. The G560 needs a workaround because it’s USB-primary. The Pebble V3 works via 3.5mm from the TV. Plan the signal path before buying.

Bluetooth speakers for gaming still have lag. Even in 2025, Bluetooth audio has ~100ms latency — noticeable in fast games. All three picks here support wired modes for gaming. Use Bluetooth for music and YouTube, wired for games. Full stop.

Jarir markup on speakers is brutal. Audioengine A2+ can be SAR 1,300+ at Jarir vs SAR 1,099 on Amazon.sa. Go listen at Jarir if you need to hear before buying, but always order online. The same goes for Logitech and Creative.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need gaming-branded speakers or will regular speakers work?

Regular speakers work great — often better. The Audioengine A2+ aren’t marketed as gaming speakers and they sound excellent for games. “Gaming speakers” like the G560 add features (surround emulation, RGB, dedicated sub) that are genuinely useful, but the base audio quality of real bookshelf speakers is usually superior at similar price points.

Can I use these speakers with PS5?

Yes, but signal path matters. Audioengine A2+ and Pebble V3 work via your TV’s 3.5mm jack or optical-to-analog adapter. The G560 is USB-primary and needs a workaround on console. If PS5 is your main system, the A2+ is the smoothest setup.

What’s the best budget gaming speaker in KSA under SAR 300?

Creative Pebble V3 at SAR 229. It’s the only sub-SAR 300 speaker on Amazon.sa that’s genuinely good rather than tolerable. USB-C single-cable setup, Bluetooth 5.0, and clarity that punches well above its price.

Do gaming speakers need a subwoofer?

Depends on what you play. Cinematic games (God of War, RDR2, Cyberpunk) benefit massively. Competitive FPS (Valorant, CS2) actually don’t — directional audio matters more than bass, and a sub can muddy footstep cues. The G560 includes a sub. The A2+ doesn’t but supports adding one later. Pebble V3 has none.

Should I buy speakers or a soundbar for my PS5 setup?

Soundbar if your PS5 is in the majlis connected to a TV. Desktop speakers if it’s in your room on a desk. The form factor should match the room. Don’t stuff bookshelf speakers into a living room setup when a soundbar makes more sense — and vice versa.

As an Amazon Associate, Kazazone earns from qualifying purchases. When you buy through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps us keep creating honest, independent reviews for Saudi gamers.

Share this article

Found this useful? Pass it on to someone who's shopping.

Related Reviews