Testseek.com have collected 63 expert reviews of the Beats by Dr. Dre Pill bluetooth portable speaker and the average rating is 70%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Beats by Dr. Dre Pill bluetooth portable speaker.
(70%)
63 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
70010063
The editors liked
Fun product. Great design
That is ergonomic and easy to hold. Comes with plenty of accessories
Including a carrying case. Crazy powerful for such a little speaker. Shines on vocals and highs
The
Sleek design. Works well as a speakerphone.
The Beats by Dr. Dre Pill is a portable Bluetooth speaker with striking design
Good sound and volume for its size
Decent battery life
And speakerphone capabilities. It has tap-to-pair capabilities for NFC-enabled smartphones phones
Apt-X technology
A
Fun
Colorful design
NFC compatible
Good audio quality
Impressive Bluetooth range
Portability
The big red ‘b' Loud volume
Great clarity at 30 feet
24 hour battery life
USB-C lossless audio support
Well-implemented Amplify and Stereo Modes
Extremely well built. Easy smartphone pairing via NFC. Battery lasted six hours. Comes with an attractive
Formfitting carrying case
Awesome design
Full of accessories
The editors didn't like
Not the most rugged portable speaker out there
But the included carrying case makes up for that. Had some issues when pairing and often had to turn the Pill on and off. Bass is weak. Observed some distortion and popping at very high volumes
Distorts heavily at high volumes
The Pill is somewhat pricey
And Apple iOS 6 users may encounter an unacceptable amount of Bluetooth hiccuping. The speaker doesn't acquit itself terribly well with big bass tracks from artists like Dr. Dre
Lacks buttons for changing tracks
No Voice Command/Call Announce
Speakerphone suffers from latency
Uninspiring design
Bass performance Below par battery
USB-C volume is finicky
No USB-C port cover
Close to zero bass. Frequent dropouts
Even when line of sight was maintained. Upper frequencies are harsh — and so is the price