Creative’s new otherworldly desktop speakers belong on an alien spaceship – and they’re so good, I’d abduct them

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Creative Pebble Nova: One-minute review

Like any decent work of art, the new Creative Pebble Nova will mean different things to different people. TechRadar’s audio editor Becky Scarrott said they looked like Magic 8-Balls, or lawn bowls with audio credentials – and she meant that as high praise. My partner thought they looked like an overly-elaborate microphone set up. I saw them more as delightful flotsam from an alien spacecraft, which had found its way to my desk.

However you look at it, the Pebble Nova speakers are a novel-looking new audio set-up fitting to strut their way onto our list of the best desktop speakers (and possibly even the best stereo speakers) on fashion chops alone.

The proposition doesn’t need to rely on its good looks to get by, though. These speakers sound great, with defined bass, a high max volume and selection of enhancement features that make a marked difference to the norm for the money. They’re elevated from your desk to create a much more immersive surround-sound effect and use coaxial drivers to refine the audio they deliver.

You’ll find, though, that they cost a fair amount of aforementioned money. As the newest in Creative’s line of affordable Pebble computer speakers, you’d think they might adhere to the affordable end of the market, but they’re fairly premium in price. Not bank-breaking, but definitely enough to think twice about.

Maybe not twice actually, perhaps thrice. The Pebble Nova take a fair amount of set-up, with Creative channeling its inner Ikea with how much construction is needed. They also require a fair bit of space due to their design, so you’ll need to make sure your desk is relatively large and uncluttered for them.

All that said, if you do decide you have the space, money and patience for them, the Creative Pebble Nova are a great set of computer speakers, regardless of what kind of audio you need them to play.

Creative Pebble Nova review: Price and release date

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Announced in December 2024
  • Mid-range at $279.99 / £239.99 / AU$499.95

The Creative Pebble Nova were released in December 2024, as the latest entry in Creative’s Pebble line-up of desktop speakers. They are, by a significant margin, the most expensive.

You can pick up the Creative Pebble Nova for $279.99 / £239.99 / AU$499.95 (although fair warning: they’re out of stock in several of the regions I checked). That ain’t cheap, especially when you consider that the next most expensive members of the Pebble family, the Pebble X, cost $89.99 / £84.99 / AU$169.95.

At that price, there’s no doubt that these are premium speakers. There are only a few entries on our list of the best computer speakers that cost more, although admittedly those cost a lot more, so if you want premium speakers but don’t want to hand over your life savings for them, these could be a good option.

As audiophiles will know, though, you can spend a lot more on high-spec speakers, up to ten times as much.

Creative Pebble Nova review: Specs

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Drivers

1-inch tweeter, 3-inch woofer

Connectivity

Bluetooth 5.3

Connections:

Bluetooth, AUX, USB

Creative Pebble Nova review: Features

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)
  • USB, Bluetooth and AUX connections
  • Creative App brings ways to customize audio
  • Acoustic Engine brings some useful features

The Creative Pebble Nova offer three ways to connect to your chosen device. First up is with a 3.5mm jack, which will let you play music but won’t let you customize it via the Creative App (more on that later). Second is Bluetooth, with the Nova supporting Bluetooth 5.3 to various devices including phones, computers and games consoles. Thirdly is with USB, which is what I did for the majority of this review. In the box is a USB-C to USB-C cable but if, like me, your PC only has USB-A ports, you can buy cheap adaptors online.

If you connect via Bluetooth or USB, the Creative App (available on mobile and PC) is a no-brainer. It offers the ability to change the Nova’s LED lighting effects, an equalizer along with loads of presets, the ability to switch which of the speakers is the left and right one and the promisingly-titled Acoustic Engine.

Take my advice: when you first set up the Pebble Nova, go to the Acoustic Engine page and turn everything on. It includes features like audio upscaling, dialogue enhancement and virtual surround-sound, all of which have marked improvements on the way the speakers sound. I regret that I was already weeks into the testing process before I bothered to open this page!

  • Features score: 4.5/5

Creative Pebble Nova review: Design

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Bowling balls on stalks
  • Takes up lots of space
  • Time-consuming set-up process

How do you describe the design of the Creative Pebble Nova? Are they eyeballs on stalks? Alien command consoles? Magic 8-Balls? If you’re able, check out the review pictures because they’ll do better justice to the odd look of the Nova than my Creative Writing degree ever could. If you can’t see them, then… they’re basically giant spheres, held up from a circular base by a thin dowel.

It’s certainly a unique look taking the spherical-ish looks of other Pebble devices and literally elevating it. But it has a second advantage: the speakers themselves are higher than computer speakers generally are, which means ‘surround sound’ audio actually does surround you, as it’s at ear level (with the 45-degree point of the speakers also helping).

You can pick the Novas up in black, as you see in the images, and in a chic white-and-bronze model too.

I can see this design being a bit divisive but I didn’t mind it (I also spent lots of the review period with them hidden by my second screen). However there are two issues too.

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)

Firstly, these take up a lot of space. Said space is at a premium when it comes to the desk upon which I use my desktop computer, and I found it quite hard to accommodate the Pebble Nova given the dimensions of both the speakers and my London apartment – it’s why the images accompanying this review are of my laptop, because my desk was too cluttered with the Creatives on it!

The second thing to note is that the Pebble Nova take quite a bit of setting up: not only do you need to go through all the usual cable rigamarole of desktop speakers, but you also have to attach the dowels to the stands and those to the speakers. This was admittedly easier than your average Ikea project, but it still took a little while to accomplish (I should note, you don’t have to elevate the speakers if you don’t want, and can attach them straight to a stand).

On the primary– ‘orb’? – you get several ports: the USB-C power delivery port, another USB-C port to connect to your computer, and the 3.5mm headphone jack, as well as the cable which runs to the other speaker. You also get a range of buttons for volume, power, connection and more.

The speakers have LED lights which you can program using the app, although they’re not huge or bright and I didn’t really notice them during everyday PC use.

  • Design score: 4/5

Creative Pebble Nova review: Sound quality

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)
  • 1-inch driver + 3-inch woofer
  • Exuberant, clear bass and mids
  • Unnecessarily-high max volume

Each of the Creative Pebble Nova speakers packs both a 1-inch tweeter with a 3-inch woofer in a coaxial set-up.

I’m used to PC speakers being good for certain tasks and struggling with other ones (a set-up that’s great for music might struggle for the range of sounds needed for gaming, or be poorly-tuned for YouTube videos, for example) but I was pleasantly surprised at how the Creative was a jack of all trades.

I say ‘pleasantly surprised’ because it wasn’t necessarily expected. The presence of a woofer gives away that the Pebble Nova has a distinctly energetic sound profile, with plentiful bass. However these lower tones are well-defined and clear, instead of being overpowering and thumping like some bassy speakers can be.

This meant I could enjoy different kinds of music but then could listen to spoken-word audio without low voices having an unnatural rumble to them, an issue I’ve faced before.

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)

Treble is a little less bright than it could be, but I quickly fixed this in the Creative App with some quick equalizer tweaking.

The Creative Pebble Nova is great for the kind of sound stage or surround-sound audio that really benefits immersive gaming. This is because the elevated height of the speaker poles, plus their being angled upwards at 45 degrees, means that audio is a lot closer to ear-level than your standard desktop speakers.

The result is a marked improvement in immersion: the tweeting of birds, the sound of wind in trees, the repeated taunting of a dangerous bandit I was unsuccessfully trying to run away from, all felt well-placed around me during gaming sessions. The effect was definitely more pronounced than on other desktop speakers I’ve tried, which sit lower than your ear level.

According to Creative, the Pebble Nova has a whopping 100W power output for high volumes. Since I have neighbors, I didn’t test quite how loud it goes, but it definitely reached (and could easily exceed) my needs. Why you’d need incredibly-loud speakers for your desktop, presumably within half a meter of you, isn’t quite clear, but it means that they can double as general party speakers if you prefer.

  • Sound quality: 4.5/5

Creative Pebble Nova review: Value

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Not a viable option for people on a tight budget
  • Other Pebbles may appeal to money-conscious buyers

While the overall Pebble line of Creative desktop speakers is known for offering great value for money, that’s naturally less true of the Nova, as premium equipment always offers incremental returns for the price.

The Nova are good, but you’re paying for it, as they’re not cheap (at least, by Creative standards, although you can easily find countless pricier alternatives). They’re not poor value for money, but they’re not as much an obvious bargain as other Pebbles. That said, if I had the expendable income, I’d buy them – so take from that what you will.

  • Value: 4/5

Should I buy the Creative Pebble Nova?

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)
Swipe to scroll horizontally
Creative Pebble Nova score card

Attributes

Notes

Rating

Features

The Creative app lets you fine-tune your audio with some useful features.

4.5/5

Design

The look is unique, but they take up a lot of space.

4/5

Sound quality

The sound is warm and well-defined, with a high max volume.

4.5/5

Value

You’re getting what you pay for.

4/5

Buy them if…

Don’t buy them if…

Creative Pebble Nova review: Also consider

How I tested the Creative Pebble Nova

The Creative Pebble Nova on a brown table, connected to a green laptop.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Tested for one month
  • Tested at home connected to phone and windows PC

The testing process of the Creative Pebble Nova was over a month.

For most of that time, I tested the Nova alongside my Windows desktop PC, with the speakers on my desk. I also tested it paired via Bluetooth to my phone and, for a short while, connected to my Windows laptop (as pictured).

I used my PC as normal during the month which includes my day job, various other types of work, watching TV shows and YouTube videos, streaming lots of music and playing video games.

I have over six years’ experience testing gadgets for TechRadar which includes other desktop speakers, audio products (including from Creative) and other types of tech.

  • First reviewed in March 2025

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