Senso Systems
There’s a new name in UK hifi, and it’s not messing about with a starter product. Accuvoice Systems, the brand from Swedish designer Anders Wijk, has launched its first system here through Sound Design Distribution. It’s called the Stream S3, and rather than the usual single hero speaker, it arrives as a full package: a pair of active, WiSA-enabled loudspeakers plus a dedicated streaming hub, built to work as one system rather than a stack of separate boxes you have to wrangle together.
We caught wind of it after it turned up at the North West Audio Show 2026, and now we’ve got one on the bench here in the studio, so we can go beyond the spec sheet.
Each speaker is a three-way active design with five drive units on board: a 29mm silk dome tweeter, a pair of 130mm mid/bass drivers in an MTM layout, and two side-firing 120mm woofers set up to cancel each other’s vibration rather than shake the cabinet. Per speaker that’s 600W of amplification, so 1.2kW when you count the pair. Accuvoice says the opposed woofer arrangement is there to keep the cabinet still while the drivers do the work, and the tweeter sits on a CNC-machined aluminium plate.
There’s also a proprietary DSP system, called Virtual Source Point, handling time alignment across all five drivers per speaker, aiming for a single coherent point source rather than five separate ones doing their own thing. Everything is built in Sweden, wired internally with In-akustik cable, and set up to run as a Roon endpoint if that’s your world.
“They've got real musicality for their size, and for what you're getting, it's a premium system at a genuinely competitive price.”
Senso Team
This is where the “system” part of the name earns its keep. The Stream S3 covers Spotify Connect Lossless, Tidal Connect, Qobuz Connect, AirPlay 2, Chromecast and Bluetooth 5.2, so most people’s existing setup just works without a workaround. On the physical side there’s HDMI ARC, three optical inputs, coaxial, RCA, USB audio for computers, USB for disc playback, and a subwoofer output if you want to add low end later.
Control runs through the Accuvoice app or an aluminium remote, and the system handles its own room correction along with a three-preset parametric EQ and 2.1 bass management, so getting it sounding right in an actual room shouldn’t need an engineering degree.
Standard finishes are Titanium Dark Grey and Architect White, with Aluminium Grey, Royal Blue and Pearl Beige available as special orders. The tweeter plate comes in Graphite Black as standard, or Champagne Gold and Copper Red if you want it to double as a design object rather than disappear into the room. Ours is in Titanium Dark Grey, a brushed gunmetal finish with a subtle angled top edge rather than a plain box, and the gold Accuvoice Systems script on the black tweeter plate is a nice bit of restraint rather than a shouty logo moment.
UK pricing for the full system, both speakers and the hub, is £5,995, available from July 2026.
Three-way active DSP loudspeaker system, paired with a wireless streaming hub.
Pros
Cons
A lot of what we do at Senso is help brands cut through and say plainly what they’re actually offering, so a spec sheet this clear is refreshing on its own terms. One box that streams from every major service, corrects for your room and drives 1.2kW of hardware, at £5,995, is a genuinely useful pitch, and not many first products manage to make that case convincingly.
We’ve now got the Stream S3 set up and playing here in the studio, and it backs the spec sheet up. The finish is premium in the hand, nothing about it feels like a first product finding its feet. Sound-wise, it’s warm and full for something this size, more presence in the room than the dimensions suggest. Hifi Pig said much the same after hearing it at NWAS 2026, and now we can say it ourselves. On paper and in the room, this is a confident opening move from a new name, and one we’ll be following up on with a fuller listening review.