Sounds and looks good! Well, just played my first song on my newly unboxed Roar 2. Haven't tested at high volume, so can't comment about that. At default volume though, the sound quality from such a small package is satisfying. I'm a basshead, so if its not booming, its not nice. While it doesn't have the kind of boom that I'd really really like, the bass is extraordinary, considering its emitted from such a small package. Its only 1 litre in size! It feels like its got half the punch of my other Creative 2.1 speaker - the T3300 (sg.creative.com/p/speakers/inspire-t3300). Compared to T3300's 8 litres subwoofer, the Roar 2 is not bad at all! Thus, the Roar 2 is the ideal portable speaker - easy to carry around and packs a punch. That said, in a static environment (desktop PC + 2.1 speakers), I'd still prefer music blasting through my Creative T3300 due to the stronger thumping bass. Nonetheless, this is not a valid comparison. On the move, the Roar 2 is excellent! Don't think there's any other option this teeny-weeny size, blasting such satisfying bass.
+Matt Clepper Sounds great (for such a small package)! Not sure how loud it can get though (still running-in my brand new Roar 2). For mobility, this is THE best option. For stationary playback, I'd recommend the cheaper and bassy-ier Creative T3300 (sg.creative.com/p/speakers/inspire-t3300). Update: It pumps out 33 Watts RMS of power (at 1% THD).
+Matt Clepper Likewise, got mine recently. However, being a basshead, not only do I activate TeraBass all the time, I pumped up the sound source's bass output to the max as well (PC - Creative Sound Blaster Control Panel ... Android HP - Bass Booster 100%).