Cearvol Launches Wave Earbuds, Liberté Clip-Ons, and Lyra Smart Glasses in Triple Hearing Tech Reveal

Cearvol is expanding the idea of “hearables” with its Wave in-ear earbuds, a device positioned as both everyday wireless audio and a hearing-assistance solution. Built around AI voice amplification and a noise-blocking in-ear fit, Wave is designed to make conversations clearer in busy environments like offices, lecture halls, and public spaces.

A standout feature is its four-microphone setup, which powers AI voice amplification. Thanks to the in-ear design that helps reduce surrounding noise, Wave can deliver a higher amplification gain—rated at 40 dB +/- 5 dB—so speech can come through more strongly when background sounds would normally drown it out.

For audio hardware, the earbuds use balanced armature drivers and target a frequency response range of 200 Hz to 6,000 Hz, which is centered on the most important parts of the human voice. That tuning suggests Wave is focused less on booming bass and more on improving speech intelligibility—especially helpful for meetings, presentations, and one-on-one conversations.

Battery life is another practical win. Cearvol rates Wave for up to 22 hours of total runtime when used with its charging case, aiming to cover a full day of use without constantly hunting for a charger.

The charging case is where Wave separates itself from typical earbuds. Instead of requiring a smartphone app for every tweak, the case includes a built-in LCD touchscreen that lets users adjust settings directly. That could be especially appealing to anyone who wants quick access to controls without digging through menus on a phone.

Cearvol also adds a smart accessibility feature: the case can act as a remote microphone. You can place it up to 10 meters (33 feet) away—such as near a speaker at the front of a room—so the voice you want to hear is captured more clearly and delivered to your earbuds. This is particularly useful in large meetings, lecture halls, or group discussions where distance makes understanding difficult.

There’s also an AUX-IN port on the case, allowing a wired audio source to feed into the case and then transmit audio wirelessly to the earbuds. That opens up additional listening options with devices that still rely on a cable connection.

Cearvol hasn’t shared pricing or availability yet, but the Wave earbuds are shaping up as an interesting option for people who want wireless earbuds with conversation-boosting features—especially if the touchscreen case and remote mic functions deliver on their promise.