The ULTIMEA Poseidon D60 is a serious home theater upgrade that ditches the bland built-in TV speakers in favor of a full 5.1-channel surround setup with Dolby Atmos support. It ships with the main soundbar, two wired satellite speakers, and a wireless subwoofer — so out of the box you are already getting true surround, not just virtual left-right.
Overview
ULTIMEA built the Poseidon D60 around six high-performance drivers and their own BassMX and VoiceMX processing tech. Dolby Virtual Atmos handles the height channels through smart signal processing, so even without upfiring speakers you get a convincing three-dimensional soundstage. The companion app gives you a serious amount of control over the audio without digging through menu hell.
Key Features
- 5.1ch Dolby Atmos with Dolby Virtual Atmos processing
- 410W peak output power
- 6 drivers total: 3x 2.25-inch in the soundbar, 2x 2.25-inch surround speakers, 5.25-inch wireless subwoofer
- BassMX technology with up to 15mm diaphragm excursion for deep, controlled bass
- VoiceMX dynamic EQ for clearer dialogue in the 300Hz–3kHz range
- HDMI eARC with up to 37Mbps bandwidth for lossless audio
- Bluetooth 5.3 for stable, low-latency wireless connection
- Multiple inputs: HDMI eARC, Optical, AUX, USB, Bluetooth
- ULTIMEA App with 10-band graphic EQ, 13-step level adjustment, and 121 preset sound modes
- Touch controls on the main soundbar unit
Who is it for?
This one is aimed at people who want a real surround sound setup without the complexity of a full AV receiver and floor-standing speakers. If you watch a lot of movies and action content and want to actually feel the bass and hear sound coming from behind you, the Poseidon D60 delivers that without requiring a PhD to set up. It also works great for gaming setups where positional audio matters.
Pros and Cons
- Pro: True 5.1 physical speaker setup, not just virtual surround
- Pro: Deep app-level customization with a proper EQ
- Pro: Clean HDMI eARC connectivity with lossless audio support
- Con: No physical upfiring drivers, so Atmos height effects are simulated
- Con: Satellite speakers are wired, which may limit placement flexibility
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