Kambi Audio was a high-end consumer audio company based in the Pacific Northwest (specifically Portland, Oregon) that gained a cult-like following in the late 2010s. Known for their striking industrial design, use of premium materials, and a relentless focus on value-for-money, Kambi disrupted the audiophile market by offering loudspeakers that competed with brands costing two or three times the price.
However, the company is perhaps best known for its abrupt and controversial closure in 2023, leaving the audio community speculating about the difficulties of the direct-to-consumer business model.
Most IEMs use a "flat" frequency response (what you hear is exactly what the mic hears). In theory, this is great. In practice, it leads to vocal fatigue. Kambi Audio engineers developed a proprietary "Worship Curve." kambi audio
Reviewers often described the "Kambi Sound" as fast, dynamic, and transparent.
Unlike some competitors that voiced their speakers to sound warm and "forgiving" (hiding bad recordings), Kambi speakers were tuned to be honest. They had exceptional speed in the midrange, making vocals sound incredibly lifelike. The treble was detailed but rarely harsh, a difficult balance to strike with metal dome tweeters. Kambi Audio was a high-end consumer audio company
How other scripts will interact with the system.
public class BettingButton : MonoBehaviour
[SerializeField] private SoundData clickSound;
[SerializeField] private SoundData confirmSound;
public void OnPointerDown()
KambiAudioManager.Instance.PlaySound(clickSound);
public void ConfirmBet()
KambiAudioManager.Instance.PlaySound(confirmSound);
// Logic to place bet...
What stands out: Industrial, utilitarian design. No chrome, no carbon-fiber fake accents. Most housings are CNC-machined aluminum or medical-grade resin. What stands out: Industrial, utilitarian design
Target: Lead vocalists, guitarists, drummers.