Monster Open Free AC100
I got sent a link to this deal by a buddy who knows I can't stand anything shoved in my ear canal. He was right to flag it. The Monster Open Free AC100 headphones solve a problem I didn't know had a decent solution under twenty bucks — they clip on, sit outside your ears, and just let sound happen without plugging anything up.
"I bought these after my pair of regular earbuds started hurting my ears. These are so much more comfortable for all day use."
The battery life claims 30 hours total across the case charges. Nobody actually measures that stuff in real life, but I've been wearing them around the condo while running thermal tests on a refurbished laptop and they haven't died on me yet. The Bluetooth 5.3 connects instantly. A reviewer mentioned leaving them on a desk where dogs might grab them. My Pixel hasn't shown interest, but I'm not testing that theory.
The only tradeoff is the open design. You hear everything around you. If you want to block out a noisy coffee shop, these aren't your move. If you need to hear your girlfriend calling from the kitchen while you listen to a podcast, they're perfect. For nineteen bucks with the code, I bought two pairs.
Monster N-Lite 203 AirLinks
These caught my eye because of the Qualcomm apt-X mention at a sixty-dollar price point. But then I saw the reviews. One person wrote "Very very low volume and battery doesn't last at all." That's a one-star review with no fluff. Another reviewer called them "Nice earbuds! Love the color and work good." Mixed signals. The featherlight 0.1oz weight is appealing for all-day wear, but inconsistent feedback makes me hesitant. I'd grab them as a backup pair for the car, nothing more.
Monster Champion Wireless Earbuds
The 100-hour battery claim is the headline here, and combined with IPX8 waterproofing, this looks like the pair you'd take on a week-long trip without bringing the charger. I don't see a reviewer confirming the battery math, but Monster has been decent about those specs on their higher-end stuff. If I were reviewing these for my channel, I'd run a drain test. On paper, they're the most feature-packed set in this batch.
Monster S270 Mini Bluetooth Speaker
Ten watts of power in a speaker the size of a fist. The 360-degree sound and light show are fun for the patio, but the bass won't rattle anything. I grabbed one for the workshop where I test laptops — it's loud enough to hear over a desk fan but small enough to toss in a drawer. The IPX6 rating means I don't panic if I spill coffee near it.
Monster Energy Java Mean Bean 12-Pack
Over 8,000 reviews with a 4.7-star average. That's not a fluke. The non-carbonated coffee-meets-energy-drink format is smooth — no carbonation burps, just caffeine and vanilla. I keep a few cans in the fridge for afternoons when a thermal test is running and I need to stay sharp. The 220 calories per can is worth noting if you're watching intake, but for a bulk buy under twenty-six bucks, this is a solid restock.
Monster Jam Megalodon Truck Toy
Twelve bucks and it picks up smaller toys with a chomping action. If you've got a three-year-old who leaves a trail of Hot Wheels through the living room, this thing gamifies cleanup. I'd have loved this as a kid.
IJG Lighted Faux Monstera Plant
Twenty-four dollars for a fake plant with warm LED lights built in. No watering, no sunlight, no dead leaves dropping on your desk. The 29% discount brings it down from the inflated original price, but at this price, it's a low-stakes way to add some green to a room. I've seen worse-looking fake plants at triple the cost.
Monster Open Ear AC317 Headphones
Fast Type-C charging in one hour is the standout spec here. Twenty-four hours of playback with a full charge in sixty minutes is convenient if you forget to plug in overnight. The open-ear design means you trade bass for awareness, which is fine for outdoor runs.
Monster Kids Bluetooth Headphones (Cute SK100)
The volume limiter at 85/94dB and the Child Mode button lock are thoughtful touches if you've got a kid using Zoom for school. Sixty hours of battery is overkill in the best way — you won't be hunting for a charger mid-week. The lightweight build (0.228lb) means a child won't complain about neck fatigue. No reviews yet, but the specs check out for the target audience.
Monster Open Ear AC312 Wireless Earbuds
Sixteen-millimeter drivers in an open-ear design with ENC mics for calls. The 32-hour battery and Bluetooth 5.4 are standard for this category, but the 75% off coupon makes the price interesting.
Monster N-Lite 211 Wireless Earbuds
Bluetooth 6.0 is ahead of most budget earbuds, and the LED battery display on the case is genuinely useful. Thirty-six hours of battery at twenty bucks is competitive. The IPX5 rating handles sweat. If the previous N-Lite model is anything to go by, these should be a safe bet for daily commutes.
PlayMonster Laughing Stitch Dice Game
Press Stitch's belly, roll the die, pass him around, and hope he doesn't laugh while you're holding him. Simple, fast, and under nine bucks. For a family game night with kids ages six and up, this is a low-investment way to get everyone laughing.
Monster Open Ear AC310 Headphones (BOGO)
Buy one, get one free at thirty bucks. If you need a spare pair or want to gift one to a workout buddy, this is the math that works. Sixty hours of total battery with IPX5 water resistance. The open-ear design is identical to the AC100 in concept, just in a different chassis.
Monster Clarity 101 AirLinks Wireless Earbuds
Touch controls and a magnetic charging case at twenty bucks. The three ear tip sizes suggest they put thought into fit, which matters more at this price than fancy audio codecs. IPX5 waterproofing keeps them safe during a workout.
Monster Open Ear AC600 Headphones
Bluetooth 5.4 and Qualcomm apt-X at thirty bucks with a 75% off code. The IPX6 rating is higher than most open-ear designs at this price. Only three reviews so far, so the long-term picture is fuzzy, but the specs are compelling enough to try one pair.
Monster Open Ear Wireless Earbuds (AUX3IGAJ code)
Twenty dollars with the code, IPX5, Bluetooth 5.4, and ENC for calls. This is the cheapest entry point into the open-ear category in this list.