Tronsmart Fiitune X30 Review: A Budget Spatial Speaker That Skips Dolby Atmos

Carlos Blanco
Tronsmart Fiitune X30 Review A Budget Spatial Speaker That Skips Dolby Atmos, Credits- Tronsmart

This Spatial Audio Speaker Costs Half as Much as the Sonos Era 300, But There’s One Major Catch

The Tronsmart Fiitune X30 is a bold little unit. It walks into the wireless speaker game swinging, shouting, “I can do spatial audio too!” And at just $179.99 / €179.99 (roughly £154 / AU$322), it’s way cheaper than the Sonos Era 300, which will currently set you back $449 / £449 / AU$749.

But as with most budget heroes, there’s a plot twist.

The Fiitune X30 Packs Plenty of Boom for the Buck

Let’s get this out of the way first, on paper, the Fiitune X30 is actually impressive. Tronsmart didn’t just throw a basic Bluetooth chip in a plastic box and call it “immersive.”

Here’s the spec rundown:

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  • Six drivers including a top-firing “sky driver” for faux-spatial sound

  • Dual tweeters + dual mid-range drivers + down-firing subwoofer

  • Four passive bass radiators, total power output: 80W

  • Portable build with a built-in carry handle

  • Dual-device Bluetooth pairing

  • IPX6 water resistance, so yes, it’s pool-party proof

  • 14 hours of playback on a single charge (not groundbreaking, but respectable)

  • LDAC support for Android users (a win for hi-res audio fans)

  • App-controlled EQ via iOS and Android

You can even pair two for stereo, if you’re feeling extra.

No Dolby Atmos

Here’s the kicker. While Tronsmart is aiming for spatial audio greatness, the Fiitune X30 doesn’t support Dolby Atmos. Or any other true 3D audio format, for that matter.

What you’re getting instead is virtual spatial audio, where the speaker tries to simulate height and depth using its upward-firing driver and a bit of processing magic. It’s not bad, but it’s definitely not the real deal either.

So if you were dreaming of that fully immersive, sound-all-around-you Atmos vibe, like the one you get on the Sonos Era 300, this ain’t it.

So Who’s It Really Competing With?

Let’s be honest, the Fiitune X30 isn’t a Sonos Era 300 rival. Not really. It’s more of a Sonos Roam 2 competitor, and that’s where it gets interesting.

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  • The Roam 2 is also $179 / £179 / AU$299

  • But it only pushes 10W of output compared to the X30’s 80W

  • It’s smaller, more minimal, and fits better in a backpack but the X30 is louder, more bass-heavy, and definitely trying to be your backyard’s main event

If you care more about volume, punch, and price-to-performance ratio than Atmos buzzwords, the Fiitune X30 might be a surprisingly good deal.

Final Verdict: A Big Sound for a Smaller Budget, With One Spatial Caveat

Tronsmart Fiitune X30 Review: A Budget Spatial Speaker That Skips Dolby Atmos
Tronsmart Fiitune X30 Review A Budget Spatial Speaker, Credits- Tronsmart

The Tronsmart Fiitune X30 is trying to bring spatial audio to the masses or at least the illusion of it. And to be fair, for under $200, it’s giving you a lot: big sound, party-friendly design, and nice extras like LDAC and water resistance.

But without true Dolby Atmos, calling this a rival to the Sonos Era 300 feels like a stretch. Think of it more as a high-powered alternative to compact speakers like the Sonos Roam or JBL Flip 6, with more bass, more volume, and a few spatial tricks up its sleeve.

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If you’re shopping for pure sound muscle at a decent price, the Fiitune X30 might just hit the right note. Just don’t expect it to teleport you to the middle of a live concert.

Tronsmart Fiitune X30 vs Sonos Era 300

  • Price: $179 vs $449

  • Sound Output: 80W vs 47W

  • Spatial Audio: Virtual only vs True Dolby Atmos

  • Connectivity: Dual-device pairing, LDAC (Android only), stereo mode

  • Extras: Water resistance, portable handle, EQ app, 14-hour battery

  • Bottom Line: Loud, affordable, and feature-packed but lacks the Atmos muscle to take on Sonos at full strength

Also Read- Best Hands-Free Bluetooth Speakerphones For Cars In 2025

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