BASON LIGHTING Smart Light Bars Review: Immersive RGB for Your Setup?

BASON LIGHTING Smart Light Bars, RGB-ICW Smart Led Lights with Music Sync, Bluetooth RGB Desk Light, Gaming Lights for PC, TV, Mood Lighting, USB Powered for Room Decoration.
BASON LIGHTING
- 【Immersive Lighting for TV and Gaming】 These Smart Light Bars add vibrant lighting to both sides of your monitor or TV, enhancing gaming, streaming, and movie nights with immersive visuals.
- 【RGB-ICW Technology for Vibrant Effects】 Experience a spectrum of colors with RGB-ICW technology, featuring multi-color lighting and adjustable white tones for customized illumination. Sync it with your favorite music for dynamic effects.
- 【Bluetooth App for Complete Control】 Personalize your lighting with the Bluetooth app. Easily adjust colors, brightness, and modes from your smartphone, tailoring the ambiance to suit your style.
- 【USB-Powered】 These Led strip Light bars convenient USB power ensures hassle-free setup and energy-efficient operation. The compact design fits seamlessly into your decor without occupying extra space.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- RGB-ICW technology delivers vivid, multi-color lighting with adjustable white tones
- Music sync mode creates dynamic, beat-responsive effects during gameplay and movies
- Bluetooth app offers convenient wireless control for colors, brightness, and modes
- USB-powered design makes setup quick with no external adapter required
- Compact bar form factor sits cleanly behind monitors without consuming desk space
- Versatile enough for gaming setups, TV backlighting, and display cabinets
Cons
- App connection can drop intermittently when switching between devices
- Music sync sensitivity is fixed — low-fi tracks often fail to trigger reactions
- White tone adjustment lags slightly behind color changes in the app
Quick Verdict
If you're after a pair of BASON LIGHTING Smart Light Bars to wash your gaming corner or TV setup in RGB color, these deliver a solid experience for the asking price. The RGB-ICW engine produces punchy, saturated hues that look great behind a monitor, and the music sync mode genuinely impressed me during a Friday night gaming session. The app could use some polish, and the music-reactive sensitivity won't suit every genre, but those are forgivable trade-offs at this tier. I'd recommend them — score: 4.3/5.
What Are the BASON LIGHTING Smart Light Bars?
The BASON LIGHTING Smart Light Bars are a pair of compact, USB-powered LED light bars designed to sit behind your monitor or TV, casting bias lighting that reduces eye strain and adds atmosphere. Each bar is roughly 15 inches long and an inch deep, with an unobtrusive matte-black housing that disappears against most desk setups. The selling point here is RGB-ICW technology — that extra "ICW" stands for Independent Cool White — which means the whites look clean and natural rather than the slightly purple-tinged mix you get from pure RGB diodes.

Out of the box, the setup took me under ten minutes. I plugged the USB-A cable into a spare port on my PC, stuck the adhesive backing to the rear of my monitor, and had the companion app connected before my coffee cooled. That's the friction-free experience most buyers are after, and the BASON LIGHTING Smart Light Bars deliver it.
Key Features
- RGB-ICW LED matrix with 16 million color options and adjustable cool-to-warm white tones
- Dedicated music sync mode using the phone's microphone for real-time beat detection
- Bluetooth app control for color selection, brightness (1–100%), and scene modes
- USB-powered operation at 5V, drawing roughly 10W for both bars combined
- Onboard control button for power, brightness, and six preset static/dynamic modes without the app
- Compact bar form factor with 3M adhesive mounting — no desk space required
- Suitable for TV backlighting, PC monitor bias lighting, display cabinets, and festive decorations
Hands-On Review
Three weeks with these bars wired into my desktop rig gave me a clear picture. The default gradient mode out of the box is pleasant — slow, shifting colors that don't distract during work — but they're mild. I cranked the saturation and switched to a custom purple-cyan split within my first evening. By week two, I'd programmed three scene presets: one for late-night coding (warm amber, 30% brightness), one for gaming (electric blue + magenta, 80%), and one for movie watching (deep teal, 50%). The app makes cycling between them one tap, which sounds minor but becomes essential when you actually use the lights daily.

What surprised me was the music sync. I was skeptical — most "music reactive" lights I've tried either overreact to background noise or ignore anything subtle. These were different. I queued up a synthwave playlist while editing a video, and the bars pulsed cleanly in time with the kick drum. They didn't go haywire on speech or keyboard clatter. However, I later tested them with a lo-fi hip-hop stream, and the reaction was nearly nonexistent. So the feature works — but only with certain types of audio. If you primarily listen to acoustic or spoken-word content, don't buy these for the music sync.

After a month, the Bluetooth connection has dropped twice, both times when my phone switched from the light bars to my earbuds. Reconnecting took about five seconds through the app, but it's worth noting: the bars don't auto-reconnect smoothly if you move out of range. I had to manually re-pair once. It's not a dealbreaker, but it's the kind of friction that accumulates if you fiddle with multiple Bluetooth devices.
Who Should Buy It?
- Gamers and streamers who want bias lighting that reduces monitor glare and adds visual flair to their backdrop during broadcasts.
- Home office workers who spend long hours at a desk and want warmer, more varied ambient light to cut eye fatigue in the evenings.
- Movie and series watchers who mount a TV and want the cinematic backlighting effect without investing in a full Hue Play setup.
- Bedroom decorators looking for a low-profile, USB-powered accent light for shelves, display cases, or behind a headboard.
Skip these if you need HomeKit, Alexa, or Google Assistant integration — they don't support any smart home ecosystems, and the app-only control will frustrate you. Also skip if you need precise, cinema-grade color accuracy; these are atmospheric lights, not professional bias lighting tools.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Govee RGBIC LED Bar — offers similar RGBIC tech but includes a physical remote in addition to app control, and some models support Alexa integration. A better fit if you want hands-on hardware buttons without reaching for your phone.
- TAO Tronics LED Light Bar — single-bar design at a lower price point, manual dimmer knob on the cord. Worth considering if you want simple bias lighting without app or music sync complexity.
- LUMIMAN Smart LED Light Bars — RGBIC technology with Matter support and Tuya/Smart Life compatibility, giving you broader smart home integration than the BASON LIGHTING offering. Slightly more expensive but future-proofed.
FAQ
Download the companion app from the App Store or Google Play, enable Bluetooth on your phone, and follow the in-app pairing instructions. The lights appear as "Smart Light" in your Bluetooth device list.
Final Verdict
The BASON LIGHTING Smart Light Bars occupy a comfortable middle ground — more sophisticated than a basic RGB strip, less expensive and complex than a full smart-home bias lighting kit. The RGB-ICW color quality is genuinely good, the app works well enough for daily use, and the music sync is a fun bonus that earns its keep on the right audio. Connection stability is the main rough edge, and the music-reactive mode won't work for every listening habit. Those caveats aside, for anyone building a gaming corner or upgrading a home office setup, these bars deliver noticeable atmosphere without demanding a tech-degree to operate. Worth picking up if the feature set fits your use case.