Bluesound and Sonos win best multi-room system Awards

Last year, Bluesound swooped in as newcomers to the multi-room scene and took the 2014 Product of the Year crown from long-time winners Sonos (which was still a winner at under £500). This year, the hi-res system has done it again.

Even more impressive, it has done so with a bigger, almost entirely new range. While the Duo 2.1 sub sat system and the Pulse all-in-one speaker remain from last year, there’s a new-look second generation of the Node streamer, Powernode streamer/amplifier and Vault music server and CD ripper, plus a few completely new additions in the shape of the Pulse Mini and Pulse Flex wireless speakers.

It all comes with a rather high price tag though, and if you don’t value the hi-res audio support, you can start a Sonos system for much less - there's a multi-room solution in its line-up for almost every situation, and the most affordable speaker, the Play:1, can be yours for less than £170.

It also remains one of the easiest, most intuitive ways to go multi-room – not to mention that it sounds great too. That’s why it still wins our Best Buy for best multi-room system under £500. With a new Play:5 on the horizon, it seems like 2016 could be a big year for Sonos.

For now though, it’s Bluesound that takes the Product of the Year Award with a second generation that’s stronger than ever. It might not be the cheapest way to go multi-room, but with a range and feature set as good as this, and hi-res support to boot, the investment is worth every penny.

MORE: Awards 2015: Best multi-room systems

See all of our 104 What Hi-Fi? Awards 2015 winners

Verity Burns

Verity is a freelance technology journalist and former Multimedia Editor at What Hi-Fi?. 


Having chalked up more than 15 years in the industry, she has covered the highs and lows across the breadth of consumer tech, sometimes travelling to the other side of the world to do so. With a specialism in audio and TV, however, it means she's managed to spend a lot of time watching films and listening to music in the name of "work".


You'll occasionally catch her on BBC Radio commenting on the latest tech news stories, and always find her in the living room, tweaking terrible TV settings at parties.