“This does steal a throne. And I would buy this over the Tangzu Wan'er S.G II, and it steals that spot on my recommendation list.”Watch from 1:30

TRUTHEAR
GATE
About GATE
Replacing a community favorite is a thankless job. The HOLA had a following, and the TRUTHEAR GATE arrived at the same $20 with a transparent plastic shell instead of the denser feel people associated with the older set. That is the first thing reviewers noticed. From there, the consensus is tight on the basics and split on the edges. Build is the easy part: light, small, comfortable, and plasticky in a way that reads as a clear step down from TRUTHEAR HOLA. As for the sound, tuning lands in a more neutral lane than HOLA, with polite bass and clean enough clarity to keep it in the same starter-set argument as Moondrop Chu 2 and 7Hz Zero 2. However, the consensus splits on treble. One camp hears it as smooth and easygoing. The other hears a little grit up top, the part owners most often smooth out with EQ (usually a slight bass lift and a little treble trim). On paper, it is plain by budget IEM standards: 1DD, 28 ohms, 122 dB/Vrms, a 6.1mm lipped nozzle, and a 0.78mm 2-pin cable with a 3.5mm termination. This means any basic dongle or headphone jack is enough. For tips, stock wide-bore options are the default pick for balance, while the narrow-bores nudge the low end forward if you want more weight. Then there is the accessory set. The magnetic faux-leather pouch is weirdly fancy for this bracket (still absurd at $20), and the thick oxygen-free copper cable keeps the GATE from feeling disposable even if it tangles without a chin slider. Against Moondrop Chu 2 at $19, the metal shell and extra bass give Chu 2 the build-and-fun angle, while GATE wins the accessory argument. For gaming, reviewers liked it for casual surround cues. Footstep precision is where TRUTHEAR ZERO: RED earns its $55 step-up, with cleaner separation and more dependable imaging. And that is the real answer to the HOLA question. Reviewers kept landing on the same audience: first IEM, cheap gaming set, neutral starter that does not need extra gear. That makes the replacement feel less like a sequel to HOLA and more like TRUTHEAR rebuilding its $20 entry point from scratch. Not nostalgia. A clean on-ramp.
Expert Reviews(5)
“This is a good IEM that I will recommend based on its sound.”Watch from 0:09
“Overall, I would say these earphones is okay performer, but for the price it's asking for is well worth the price.”Watch from 4:52
“I just think it sounds fine. Like, for $20, I can't really complain about the sound.”Watch from 0:39
“I think the gate is going to stand the test of time for a while as long as they keep selling it.”Watch from 15:25



