Amazon Echo Studio and Echo Dot Max hands-on: More bass, round shapes

Among the horde of new devices Amazon unveiled during its New York City event on Tuesday are two new Echo speakers: a higher-end Echo Dot called the Echo Dot Max and a next-generation Echo Studio with a new ball-shaped design. Both are available to pre-order starting today, with shipping to start on October 29. The Dot Max costs $100 ā well above the standard Dot (which remains available) ā while the Studio is priced at $220.
The Echo Dot Max looks to be Amazonās answer to Appleās HomePod mini, which is similarly compact yet touts quality sound for its size. The company says the new speaker offers ānearly three timesā as much bass response as the cheaper Echo Dot. Thatās largely because itās been redesigned on the inside to include two speakers ā a woofer and a custom tweeter ā instead of one and to increase the amount of internal air space.
The new Echo Studio, meanwhile, gets a fairly major design overhaul. It essentially looks like a bigger version of Echo Dot Max, with the old cylindrical design replaced by a spherical shape. Amazon says itās 40 percent smaller than the last one, with the goal being to make it easier to stick the device in varying locations around the house. This one is built with three full-range drivers alongside a woofer, and it supports both Dolby Atmos and spatial audio with services that offer that (such as Apple Music).
The Amazon Echo Dot Max.
(Sam Rutherford for Engadget)
The Studioās smaller footprint could be handy if you want to take advantage of the new Alexa Home Theater mode. This lets you turn up to five new Echo Studios or Echo Dot Maxes into a surround sound setup for your TV, sort of like an Alexa-fied version of the room calibration tech Sonos offers with its home speakers. If you have compatible gear, Amazon says the voice assistant will automatically locate the different speakers in your room and map out an appropriate acoustic profile. An Amazon representative told us that you need a Fire TV Stick 4K or 4K Max streamer for this to work for now, however, since Alexa uses your TVās location to determine where the front of the surround system is, then uses that in tandem with your speakersā locations to estimate where youāre sitting. This whole process takes āless than five minutes,ā according to the company, and itāll auto-adjust if you add in more speakers. You wonāt be able to mix and match Studios and Dot Maxes in one setup at launch, however ā it has to be all of one speaker or the other.
I was briefly able to check out and listen to the new speakers at the event through a controlled demo. I wouldnāt say either looks particularly āpremiumā at first blush, but the spherical designs are clean and simple, and the knitted fabric surrounding the hardware feels firm and sturdy. Neither strays too far from the traditional Echo aesthetic; you could pop them on a counter or TV stand and they wonāt draw much attention to themselves. Of note, the volume/mic control buttons and Alexa light ring are now angled on the front of each device, which may make quickly adjusting things a little bit quicker.
As for how the two speakers actually sound, I have to reiterate that my demo was highly controlled, i.e. orchestrated to make the new speakers sound as good as possible. I wasnāt able to pick a song, adjust volume or actually talk to Alexa myself. (Though Amazon says there are new chips and mic arrays to improve conversation detection.)
The Amazon Echo Studio.
(Sam Rutherford for Engadget)
With that said, the Echo Dot Max did indeed produce more bass thump and clearer separation than the cheaper Dot in a side-by-side comparison using Fleetwood Macās āDreams.ā It better, given the price, but it sounded far less āclosed-offā all the same. The Echo Studio was a marked step up from there, producing a much wider soundstage, more impactful bass and more natural highs. Again, take all of this with a grain of salt, but I wouldnāt be surprised if we said itās worth the premium for audio-focused buyers when we test it ourselves. An Amazon rep said this new Studio model isnāt noticeably louder than the last one ā ā though thatās not surprising given how much more compact it is ā the focus is on making a smaller frame and a āricherā sound. To that end, both devices seemed to go for a slightly more bass-heavy profile than a neutral one, based on my limited listen.
I was also able to demo four Echo Studios paired in tandem. Predictably, this setup filled the room with sound and delivered more precise imaging, whether we were listening to an ambient soundscape of birds chirping in the woods or an action-heavy scene from Ready Player One. I do question the value, though: Youāre getting close to the $1,000 range with four of these things, and at that point, many people may be better off just getting a decent soundbar and a dedicated subwoofer for fuller bass.
Naturally, Amazon says both speakers ā along with the new Echo Show 8 and Echo Show 11 ā are designed with Alexa+ in mind, and anyone who buys either device will be able to use the upgraded assistant in early access. Both are still likely to be more niche than the less expensive Echoes, given that many people still use these things for simpler smart home tasks and basic listening. But for those whoāve grown accustomed having an Echo around the house and are willing to pay for improved sound quality, there may be enough to like here. Weāll know more clearly when weāre able to test them on our own.