Following its fire-breathing debut at CES 2023, Nakamichi’s new Dragon Dolby Atmos soundbar is now available for pre-order. The company is only making 500 units available at the outset, which is likely a good call given the Dragon’s steep $3,500 / £2,800 / AU$5,300 pre-order price.
Nakamichi is pitching the Dragon not so much as a soundbar but rather as a plug-and-play home surround sound system. And while it shares many of the same features found in the best Dolby Atmos soundbars such as upfiring drivers and a central, horizontally arrayed enclosure for the main speakers, this 11.4.6-channel system easily trounces the capabilities of many separate component-based home theater audio systems on specs alone.
Digging into those specs, the Dragon’s main soundbar unit features 14 speakers, four of them up-firing, in a 58-inch wide stainless steel casing. Total system power is specified at 3,000 watts and Nakamichi claims it can hit staggeringly loud 125 dB SPL peaks. There’s onboard support for Dolby Atmos and DTS:X Pro processing and it also features aptX HD Bluetooth for music streaming and Dolby Vision and HDR10+ pass-through, along with VRR and ALLM, on its four HDMI 2.1 ports (one with eARC).
One feature that really makes the Dragon system stand out from the crowd is its “Omni-Motion Reference” rear speakers, which have both side- and rear-facing drivers to create a more immersive surround sound experience. These use a pair of 1.5-inch AMT tweeters – a design found in many high-end stereo speakers – along with 3.5-inch woofers and a 3-inch up-firing driver for Atmos height effects that can be rotated up to 180° to best accommodate the listening environment.
The Dragon system also features dual wireless subwoofers, both of which use two 8-inch drivers in a push-pull configuration that’s said to equal the output of four separate subs
Nakamichi’s release of the Dragon coincides with the audio brand’s 75th anniversary. To celebrate, buyers who pre-order the limited edition soundbar system will get a version with a gold plate on the front of the main unit, an etched logo on the remote control, and a behind-the-scenes digital storybook.