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World of Software > News > Skullcandy Method 360 ANC vs. Bose QuietComfort: Comparing Bose-powered earbuds
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Skullcandy Method 360 ANC vs. Bose QuietComfort: Comparing Bose-powered earbuds

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Last updated: 2025/05/21 at 5:10 AM
News Room Published 21 May 2025
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The noise-cancelling earbuds market is not just crowded — it’s packed. If a brand wants to stand out with a new release, it faces the difficult task of bringing something new to the table that can outshine the products of the major brands like Sony, Apple, and, of course, Bose.

Skullcandy’s new earbuds, the Method 360 ANC earbuds, are attempting to do just that by partnering with one of those major brands — Bose. The earbuds come with Bose-powered sound at the very impressive introductory price of $99.99 (Skullcandy will be raising the price to $129.99 at an unspecified date in the future). The cheapest Bose earbuds, on the other hand, are the QuietComfort earbuds, which retail for $179. Though they are considerably more expensive, they do often go on sale for $149 and have reached the record-low price of $129, which made us especially curious to put them head to head with the Skullcandy earbuds.

Below, you’ll find our breakdown of how the Bose QuietComfort earbuds compare to the Skullcandy Method 360 ANCs.

Skullcandy vs. Bose: Sound quality

In the press release for the Method 360 earbuds, Skullcandy called them its “most advanced audio experience to date.” In listening to everything from indie rock, video game soundtracks, and podcasts, I can see why. The Skullcandy earbuds had a balance that matched up easily to other impressive budget earbuds I’ve tested. Whether I was listening to the Final Fantasy VII soundtrack or a live Daft Punk performance, these earbuds punched above a $100 price point.

How does Bose-powered sound compare to the real deal?
Credit: Bethany Allard / Mashable

However, when listening to them side by side with the Bose earbuds, the Skullcandy earbuds felt muffled and muddier (though I wouldn’t describe them as muddy on their own).

When listening to Japanese Breakfast’s “Savage Good Boy,” I could still pick out different parts of the song’s instrumentation, but I had to listen harder to pick up the piano past the guitar and vocals than I did with the Bose earbuds. While listening to the “Hush (Still Woozy remix)” by The Marías, the layers of the song were present with the Skullcandy earbuds, but shined with the Boses. Ultimately, the Skullcandys provided a solid listening experience, but the one the Bose earbuds provided was undeniably better. At the same volume, the QuietComfort earbuds sounded warmer, fuller, and generally more powerful. (I say this as someone who doesn’t necessarily love bumping the volume super high.)

bose app page for equalizer settings

Bose offers five total EQ presets, plus a custom setting.
Credit: Screenshot: Bose

skullcandy app page for equalizer settings

Compared to Skullcandy’s three presets and custom equalizer.
Credit: Screenshot: Skullcandy

For both, I found their standard mix to be on the bass-heavy side. However, Bose offers five EQ presets and a custom equalizer, compared to Skullcandy’s three presets with a custom equalizer.

Winner: Bose QuietComfort

Skullcandy vs. Bose: Noise cancellation

Skullcandy uses four mics to help block out sound, compared to the QuietComforts’ three mics.

That said, Bose’s earbuds literally have the words quiet and comfort in their name. Not to mention, the brand’s been a leader in the noise-cancelling space for quite some time. Whether I was working at home with my partner on the other side of the wall, in a cafe, library, or taking a walk, I generally found the Bose earbuds more adept at muting and outright blocking out sounds. That especially came through when I used just the noise cancellation without music to help it.

However, the Skullcandy earbuds do offer adjustable ANC via the companion app, which isn’t currently available on any pair of Bose earbuds. For their price point, it’s not a feature I expected, but one I was pleasantly surprised to encounter. At its highest setting, the noise cancellation only had the slightest hiss. While Bose essentially had none at all in my experience, I was still surprised that the Skullcandy’s noise cancellation was comparable at all, considering the price discrepancy.

skullcandy app screenshot for noise cancelling tab

The Skullcandy companion app allows you to adjust the ANC on a sliding scale.
Credit: Screenshot: Skullcandy

And still, it’s worth saying: the Skullcandy earbuds’ ANC is very impressive for the price point. While working at the library, I could barely hear the murmurs of a conversation across the room that I could make out word for word without wearing the earbuds. On the Bose buds, the conversation disappeared altogether, giving them the slightest edge.

Both earbuds allow you to toggle the ANC on and off and activate a transparency mode. With this last setting, the Bose stood out more effortlessly, amplifying the world around me just enough without overly emphasizing sounds or the room tone. The Skullcandy earbuds, on the other hand, exhibited a stronger background hiss in this mode. It didn’t make it unusable by any means, but definitely less pleasant than that of the Bose earbuds.

Winner: Bose QuietComfort, by a hair

Skullcandy vs. Bose: Comfort and design

For how they fit into the ear, the designs are quite similar on these earbuds, which makes them wear very similarly. In my ears, I found the Bose earbuds to be slightly more comfortable, but both pairs come with three sizes of stability bands and three sizes of ear tips. At the end of the day, fit can be very personal, especially with earbuds.

skullcandy and bose earbuds

The earbuds have a similar shape, and both come equipped with a similar type of ear tip and stability band.
Credit: Bethany Allard / Mashable

As for the earbuds themselves, the Skullcandy earbuds actually resembled the Bose QuietComfort Ultra earbuds more, with a slightly elongated stem and exterior touch controls with the perfect level of sensitivity. As someone who far prefers tactile on-ear controls, I was surprised by how well these earbuds distinguished the different types of presses. I think because the earbud has a slight groove where the touch controls are, it’s easy to identify where to touch, and to not brush against the surface and activate the controls accidentally.

On the other hand, the regular QC earbuds have a flatter, more rounded touch control surface, which, in my testing of these earbuds last fall, I found to err on the side of oversensitivity. While I didn’t experience that issue much this time around, it’s worth noting that I tested them initially during a time of year I was wearing more hats and hoods.

bose quietcomfort earbuds and their case, skullcandy earbuds and their case, and bose quietcomfort ultra earbuds and their case

The Skullcandy earbuds perform like the Bose QuietComfort earbuds (pictured left) but look more like the QuietComfort Ultra earbuds (pictured right).
Credit: Bethany Allard / Mashable

The Skullcandy earbuds might’ve taken the win in this section, if not for one glaring feature — their case. Unlike most other earbuds cases that merely snap open and closed, this one has a sliding mechanism with an O-ring and a slot for one earbud on either side of the interior case. If the intention was to create something outside of the box, Skullcandy did a great job, but it sacrificed some functionality in the process.

skullcandy case with earbuds out of it on a wall

This case is super bulky.
Credit: Bethany Allard / Mashable

As you can see, the case is huge compared to the earbuds, meaning if you’re not using the O-ring, it is one of the least travel-friendly pairs of earbuds out there. In their design, Skullcandy seemed to assume that’s how most people would use the case, as they placed the earbuds on the opposite side of the case. In other words, when looking at it head-on, the right earbud goes on the left side, and the left earbud goes on the right side. If you have the case clipped onto your belt with the front facing outward, this configuration makes perfect sense. In pretty much every other use case, it makes none.

The Bose case, on the other hand, is relatively compact and has a clear spot for each earbud.

black skullcandy earbuds case opened up behind open bose earbuds case

The Bose earbuds don’t have a clip-on ring, but feel marginally more portable.
Credit: Bethany Allard / Mashable

Both earbuds are IPX4 water-resistant, so they should withstand sweating during workouts just fine.

Our winner: Tie

Skullcandy vs. Bose: Battery life

There’s not much to say here other than both of these earbuds have excellent battery life. With ANC on, Skullcandy estimates you can get roughly nine hours per charge, with 23 hours of battery life in the case. Bose estimates 8.5 hours, with 31.5 hours in the case.

Numbers-wise, Bose is the winner here, but in two work weeks of testing, I only needed to charge up the Skullcandy earbuds once. The Bose app has a feature that lets you easily see the hours breakdown of your remaining battery life, but it’s not something I checked on super regularly during testing.

bose app battery life section

The Bose app makes it easy to tell how much playtime you have left.
Credit: Screenshot: Bose

For day-to-day use, I found these earbuds performed very similar in the battery life department.

Our winner: Tie

Skullcandy vs. Bose: Companion apps and extra features

When testing these earbuds side by side, I noticed right away that the Bose-powered element doesn’t make itself hidden. Skullcandy adopted the Bose QuietComfort’s power-on sound, voice assistant, and tiled app interface.

skullcandy skull id app

The Skullcandy app.
Credit: Screenshot: Skullcandy

bose quietcomfort app

Versus the Bose app.
Credit: Screenshot: Bose

While the Bose app has a few more features, including a battery prediction, smart calls, and a voice assistant section, there’s also quite a bit of overlap. Both have equalizer settings, touch control customization, low latency modes, and even a remote selfie section.

Numbers-wise, Bose simply has more features you can mess around with to truly tailor your earbud experience to what suits you best. Features-wise, Skullcandy has a slight edge with adjustable ANC, but Bose’s better ANC overall, alongside the greater customization, its battery prediction screen, and more varied EQ presets help it stand out ahead of the cheaper earbuds.

Our winner: Bose QuietComfort

Our winner: Get the Bose earbuds on sale

The fact that a pair of Skullcandy earbuds can stand up to Bose earbuds at all is a testament to what the brand has done with the Method 360 ANCs. While overall, I wouldn’t call them exactly the same, I would say they’re similar enough that you won’t be upset to grab them at $100. If they stayed at their introductory price forever, they’d be easy to recommend as the winner of this matchup.

However, they will be jumping up to $129.99. Combined with the fact that the Bose earbuds get marked down to $149 frequently enough that these earbuds will sit just $20 apart with some regularity, it’s hard not to suggest just springing the extra $20 to get slightly better earbuds with slightly more features.

Get the Skullcandy and Bose earbuds


white bose earbuds


black skullcandy method 360 anc earbuds

Still can’t decide? Check out our full reviews of the Bose QuietComfort earbuds and the Skullcandy Method 360 ANC earbuds. If you have a bigger budget, we recommend checking out our review of the Bose QuietComfort Ultra earbuds.

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