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We've spent a long time making the case that acoustic treatment doesn't have to be an eyesore. So when WIRED — one of the most widely read technology and culture publications in the world — reviewed the SoundBlocks system and led with the words "actually look good," it felt worth acknowledging.

Reviewer Parker Hall tested the SoundBlocks in his home studio and office. His framing says it better than we could: his most stylish friends complimented the panels and guessed they were either a high-end guitar amp cabinet or an actual sculpture. Nobody identified them as acoustic panels.

We love to hear that.

Recording studio control room with GIK Acoustics panels — large grey broadband absorbers on side walls, blue corner bass traps, and wood-front diffusion panels flanking a monitor screen above a mixing console

Design Matters

Hall opens with something GIK has been saying for years: design is one of the main reasons people put off buying the acoustic treatment their room actually needs. At worst, panels look like burlap sacks. Many people choose between better sound and a space they want to spend time in — and pick the space.

The SoundBlocks sit directly between those two. Panels stack together using a slide-and-lock railing system to form what looks like a freestanding wooden sculpture. On their own, they read as furniture. Grouped, they read as art. The 14 wood front designs, five wood finish shades, and 20 fabric color options mean the aesthetic decision is genuinely yours to make.

Function Doesn't Take a Back Seat

The review is clear that the visual side of things would mean nothing if the panels didn't perform. Hall notes the SoundBlocks work especially well for taming bass and isolating instruments. Each block is 10 inches deep, which puts it in the territory for serious low-end control.

He found one of their best use cases: modularity. Hall moved panels around to block amplifiers and drums from bleeding into each other during recording.

GIK Acoustics SoundBlocks in a home studio setup — two views showing the carved wood front panel and plain rear panel, stacked and leaning against a mic stand with headphones resting on top

What This Means for Your Space

The SoundBlocks aren't the right solution for every room or every problem. Wall-mounted panels, corner traps, and ceiling clouds each have their place depending on the specific acoustic challenges you're dealing with. But for anyone who has hesitated on treatment because of how it would look — in a living room, a hi-fi listening space, a home studio where artists come to record and photograph — the SoundBlocks make that hesitation harder to justify.

If you want to talk through what your room actually needs, talk to one of our acoustic experts — it's free.

Read the full review here.

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