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Sony’s WH-1000XM6 headphones just became more tempting for gamers who hate gaming headsets

The new update adds Bluetooth LE Audio's Gaming Audio Profile, giving Sony's premium noise-canceling cans a lower-latency trick for compatible gaming devices.

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Sony WH-1000XM6.
Simon Cohen / Digital Trends

Sony’s WH-1000XM6 gaming mode is rolling out through firmware version 3.1.5, adding support for Bluetooth LE Audio‘s Gaming Audio Profile, or GMAP. The same update also includes general performance improvements, so WH-1000XM6 owners have a real reason to open the Sony Sound Connect app.

It’s a handy upgrade for headphones built more for commutes or office silence than late-night matches. Bluetooth lag can make games feel faintly wrong, especially when a footstep or button press lands a fraction too late.

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The WH-1000XM6 still looks like a normal pair of premium noise-canceling headphones, thankfully. Sony’s giving it a better shot at games where ordinary Bluetooth delay can get distracting fast.

How Sony cuts game lag

GMAP goes after one of Bluetooth audio’s oldest gaming headaches. It’s designed to keep total delay under 40 milliseconds across wireless transmission and headphone processing, which should help sound effects stay closer to the action onscreen.

It won’t make every Bluetooth connection feel wired. GMAP has different profiles depending on whether speed or stability gets priority, so cleaner wireless conditions can favor faster response, while busier environments can lean toward fewer dropouts.

For the WH-1000XM6, that’s the practical win. Headphones already strong enough for travel, work, and everyday listening now have a better answer for phone games, handhelds, and compatible PCs where lag breaks the spell quickly.

Which Sony headphones get it

The WH-1000XM6 is the obvious headline here because it’s Sony’s current flagship noise-canceling headphone. Owners can install firmware version 3.1.5 through the Sony Sound Connect app.

Sony’s also bringing GMAP to the WH-1000XX / 1000X The ColleXion through firmware version 1.3.0. That’s the niche model, but the update gives the limited-edition headphones a more practical reason to exist beyond collector appeal.

When gaming mode actually helps

There’s one catch, and it’s the important one. GMAP needs support on both sides, so the headphones and the audio source need to speak the same Bluetooth gaming language before the low-latency mode can work.

That makes this update more useful for compatible phones, tablets, PCs, and handhelds than for anyone expecting every console or older Bluetooth device to suddenly behave better. It’s a firmware upgrade, not a physics cheat code.

Sony adding GMAP to the WH-1000XM6 is still a good sign for anyone who wants one premium pair of headphones for music, travel, calls, and some gaming. Update through Sony Sound Connect, then check whether the connected device supports Bluetooth LE Audio gaming features too.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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