FoKus Apollo Pro is Noble Audio’s next high-end wireless headphone, and the price tells you exactly where the company is aiming. The limited-run model is set to launch globally for $699, putting it above the already pricey FoKus Apollo.
The Pro version keeps the core hybrid driver idea. Noble combines a dynamic driver for bass with a planar magnetic driver for detail and clarity. That was the original Apollo’s big selling point, and the Pro appears to refine it instead of replacing it.
A polish pass, not a reinvention
Noble says the new model has updated acoustic tuning, plus upgraded fabric, cabling and metal accents. The ear cups are also described as more comfortable, which may matter most during long listening sessions.
The tradeoff is that the feature list does not seem radically different. There is no clear sign of a major active noise cancellation overhaul, wear detection, or spatial audio push. The headset also appears to keep the same Qualcomm QCC3084 chipset used by the standard model.
Who this makes sense for
The Noble Audio audience is not usually shopping by spec sheet alone. These headphones are for listeners who care about tuning, driver design and premium materials. That makes the extra $50 easier to understand, even if it will not convince everyone.
Still, $699 is a serious ask in a market filled with cheaper wireless headphones that bring stronger convenience features. If you are buying for travel, ANC and phone-friendly tricks may matter more. If you are buying for musical texture, Noble is clearly betting the FoKus Apollo Pro will make its case through sound. For another premium hardware angle, see our MacBook Neo review.
That puts the FoKus Apollo Pro in a strange but familiar lane. It is not chasing the mass-market headphone buyer who wants the most features for the least money. Noble is aiming at listeners who already know what a hybrid driver design can do and want a more polished version of that sound.












































