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World of Software > News > Nothing's New Ear (3) Buds Had Me Talking to My Hand, Which Is Kind of Weird
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Nothing's New Ear (3) Buds Had Me Talking to My Hand, Which Is Kind of Weird

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Last updated: 2025/09/18 at 9:58 AM
News Room Published 18 September 2025
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Earlier this year, Nothing got some attention for its first over-ear headphones. The Nothing Headphone (1) have an eye-catching squarish design and the company’s signature transparent elements. Now Nothing has upgraded its Nothing Ear (3) noise-canceling earbuds. Performance has improved but Nothing has also added a unique feature that may overshadow some of those performance improvements: a “super” microphone integrated into its charging case, which improves call-calling performance. The new buds come in white or black and are available for preorder now at $179 (£179).

I’ll get to the performance upgrades in a minute, but let’s get right to that Super Mic in the case. Nothing says it’s a dual-microphone system “driven by ambient-filtering technology that focuses on your voice and cuts through surrounding noise up to 95 dB, ensuring crystal-clear calls in any environment.” You activate it by pressing the Talk button on the case, and can double tap the Talk button to leave the microphone in the case on.

Read more: Best wireless earbuds of 2025

nothin-ear-3-case-1

You have to hit the Talk button to activate the microphone built into the case.

David Carnoy/

Test calls on the Nothing Ear (3)

I made some initial calls in the noisy streets of New York using the microphones in the earbuds. According to Nothing, each earbud is equipped with three directional microphones combined with a bone-conduction voice pickup unit. This detects micro-vibrations from the jaw and ear canal, converting them into electrical signals for precise voice pickup. There’s also a multichannel AI environmental noise-cancellation system that Nothing says has been trained on over 20 million hours of real-world audio to isolate your voice and suppress wind noise. That’s a lot of hours. 

Callers were generally impressed with what they heard. They said they could hear me clearly and the buds did a good job reducing almost all of the background noise around me. When I just used the buds’ microphones, voice-calling performance was top tier. 

When I switched to the Super Mic in the case, it didn’t dramatically affect the call quality. But callers said my voice sounded more natural and less digitized and robotic when I started speaking into the case. I was careful to hold it correctly in my hand for optimal performance.

nothing-ear-3-black-in-hand

The buds come in black or white.

David Carnoy/

Outside of calls, you can also use the Super Mic to record notes or conversations. Nothing has an Essential Space ideas feature on its phones, and you can record directly to it from the charging case using the Super Mic. Your voice notes sync to Essential Space and are automatically transcribed.

The charging case looks similar to the previous model’s case, but it feels heavier and more substantial. It’s now tricked out with metal instead of being fully plastic. “The charging case is crafted from 100% recycled aluminium and finished through 27 precision processes,” Nothing says. “Nano injection moulding fuses metal and plastic, removing the need for glue and achieving tight tolerances for a seamless, compact unibody.”

I almost wished there was a speaker built into it, so you could turn it into a mini speakerphone. But the speakers in your phone would probably sound as good, so I dismissed that idea pretty quickly.  

nothing-ear-2-vs-nothing-ear-3-case

The Nothing Ear (3) on the left has some aluminum in the case now. 

David Carnoy/

Trouble with the eartips

One thing that hasn’t changed for me is that none of Nothing’s included tips allowed me to get a tight seal. Nothing clearly spends a lot of time coming up with innovative, eye-catching designs for its products, but I would suggest it spends a little more time on eartip design, as Apple has done with the AirPods Pro 3. While the tips should fit a high percentage of ears just fine, I suspect that some wearers won’t be able to get a truly tight seal. 

When I first tried on the buds with Nothing’s largest eartips, I thought, “Wow, these sound mediocre and the noise canceling isn’t all that good.” But when I used my own larger tips from another set of earbuds, suddenly everything sounded a lot better and the noise canceling improved. It’s not as good as the second-gen Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds and the AirPods Pro 3, but the noise canceling was competitive once I got a tight seal. It’s come a long way from Nothing’s original Ear earbuds. 

Nothing says its real-time adaptive noise cancellation (up to 45 dB in the buds) adjusts to your surroundings every 600 milliseconds and monitors fit-related leakage every 1,875 milliseconds, updating the cancellation profile continuously, “so isolation stays consistent as you move.”

The Ear (3) also has an upgraded 12mm dynamic driver with a “patterned diaphragm.” Nothing says this results in a 20% larger radiating area compared to the previous generation, boosting bass response by 4 to 6 dB and treble by up to 4 dB for a wider soundstage, cleaner highs and rich mids.

I definitely heard the improved bass response and wider soundstage. The clarity also seemed improved, but overall there’s a touch of bass push that gives the buds a warmer sound profile out of the box. It should appeal to a lot of folks and work well with a lot of today’s music.

The AirPods Pro 3 offered a noticeable step up in sound quality, with better overall clarity and bass definition. But the Nothing Ear (3) sound respectable (if not exceptional) and deliver a dynamic listening experience with good bass energy — if you get a tight seal.

New Metal-Insulator-Metal antenna

Nothing says it’s refined the design of the buds with polished metal accents that show through the transparent casing. A custom Metal-Insulator-Metal antenna, just 0.35 mm thick, improves total radiated power by 15% and signal sensitivity by 20% compared to the previous generation.

nothing-ear-2-vs-nothing-ear-3-1


Enlarge Image

nothing-ear-2-vs-nothing-ear-3-1

The second-gen Ear on the left and new Nothing Ear (3) on the right with the new Metal-Insulator-Metal antenna.

David Carnoy/

That antenna is supposed to ensure “strong connections on the move,” but I still encountered interference at some street intersections in New York, leading to some brief connectivity glitches. I didn’t experience any of these glitches when testing Apple’s AirPods Pro 3 at the same intersections — having tested so many earbuds, I’m familiar with the spots where there’s typically a lot of wireless interference. This happened to me with the previous Nothing Ear model, though Nothing improved connectivity in that model with some firmware updates via the Nothing X app for iOS and Android.

The Ear (3) buds use Bluetooth 5.4 and support the SBS, AAC and LDAC audio codecs (many Android phones support the LDAC codec). And it’s worth noting that both the buds and case have an IP54 rating, which means they’re splash-proof and dust-resistant.  

Better battery life

Nothing has equipped each bud with an upgraded 55-mAh battery, which brings up listening time to up to 10 hours (a single-charge increase of 90 minutes compared to the previous model), with an additional 28 hours with the case. A rapid 10-minute USB-C charge provides up to 10 hours of playback, and the buds have wireless charging along with USB-C charging. I’m still checking whether these numbers apply when noise canceling is switched on or off. 

Nothing Ear (3) final first impressions

While Nothing’s flagship noise-canceling earbuds look similar to their predecessor, they do have some welcome improvements to their performance, including bumped-up sound quality along with better noise-canceling and voice-calling performance. I once again ran into some trouble with the eartips and had to use tips from another set of earbuds I’ve tested (Sennheiser and Bowers & Wilkins tips work best for my ears). While that doesn’t mean you won’t get a good fit, I think Nothing should look at the design of its tips and perhaps offer a larger size. 

I’m still trying to decide how useful the Super Mic in the case is, but it certainly is a unique feature. I’ll be testing the buds for a few more days and will post some additional thoughts in my full review, including some comments on their transparency mode, controls and tweaks you can make in the app.  

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