🎤 Elevate Your Sound, Elevate Your Game!
The Schecter Omen Elite-7 Electric Guitar features a striking See Thru Blue Burst finish, a solid mahogany body, and a smooth rosewood fingerboard, making it the perfect instrument for musicians seeking both style and substance. With its 7-string configuration and dual humbucking pickups, this guitar is designed to deliver powerful, versatile sound for any genre.
A**R
5 Star
Ok here goesNeck is fast, Decent setup from the factory, I made a small truss rod adjustment, fret ends nice and smoothPickups are in my opinion slightly better than my Nazgul/sentient set, I will not be replacing the pickups on this guitar no need too at all.Front of the guitar is a gloss and the back of the guitar is a Satin finish with a black binding around the entire guitar, they really need a few more pictures, but you can go to the Schecter website and see a few moreBridge is Solid no movement, low to the body, easy to intonateStrings from factory feels like 9's Ill be putting 10's on after a few weeks.Tuning machines seem solid and it holds it tune very well, it has a TUSQ nut on it not some plastic one.Very Solid no BS guitar for the price this is a good one.
T**E
Really Nice For the Price. Just Shy of Perfect
You might want to grab yourself a beverage, because I've got a lot to say about this guitar.A few years back I decided my next guitar would be a 7 string. I'd never tried one before but knew for the metal I play it would be an easily justified reason to pick up my 8th guitar. I was originally eyeballing the Jackson Dinky for under $200 to just get an idea if I'd like playing a 7. While researching, an ESP 7 string kept popping up in the results for around $600 that got me thinking about expanding my price range to that just to see what's out there. Then the red Omen Elite 7 caught my eye. I did a lot of research on the model and really liked what I read and heard. But...I already own 2 red and 2 black guitars and wanted something different. The charcoal is awesome, but not really my style, so blue it would be.When unboxing, two things hit me right out of the gate. First, this seemed smaller than pictures and review videos made it look. Not tiny smaller, but more slim and streamlined. I was expecting the bulk of my old Strat, and this was like a trimmed down take on the design. Second, it's a lot heavier than it looks. Not a bad weight, but it's like double the weight of my Ibanez of similar style, and the guitar itself looks like it should be a lot lighter. That's a strong testament to the denser mahogany they used compared to what I'm used to playing on at this price range. And it extends to the maple neck as well. The whole thing just feels rock solid. The finish is just amazing looking. From the gray satin wood stain of the back of the body and the neck, to the eye catching burl top, this looks fantastic. I am also so happy to be able to get rosewood fretboards again, and the inlays look great and are pretty unique!As I said before, this thing is solid. Just incredibly well built. The weight, while substantial, is really well balanced and comfortable to play with a strap or on my lap. The contours do a great job of feeling comfortable in any position. I do wish the front had a contour around the top similar to a Strat though, that would soften the edge by my picking arm, but that's just a really minor wishlist thing that could improve the guitar for me, not at all a complaint. The volume and tone knobs are easy to use thanks to the rubber ring around them, and they look great with that burl top. Pickups look cool with the see-through that shows off the red coils and offer a nice contrast to the blue. I was concerned about the neck feeling too fat, but it is perfectly shaped. Any issues I had playing on it are clearly a result of my inexperience playing a 7 string and extra jumbo frets, not due to design, and have improved with each practice. The neck feels perfect. The exception to that is the fret buzzing on the low B string. I had to fine tune the truss rod quite a bit and adjust the action and intonation higher than I prefer to stop the buzz. This was kind of disappointing considering Schecter is known for their factory setup. But once I dialed everything in, it plays fantastically. It just took a bit more work than reviews led me to believe I'd have to do. I'm not thrilled with the action on the low strings, but it's not so high I'm having trouble playing. It's just higher than I like. And the fret buzz was really minor all things considered, I'm just a perfectionist when it comes to things like that and it drives me nuts until I have it just right. Also, I've been playing on an Epiphone SG Special the last couple years, so I've been a little spoiled to low tension, small frets, and low action from that setup. Thicker strings and a longer scale is inevitably going to mean having to have differences in the setup than something like that. The Jumbo XL frets take some getting used to switching from standard Gibson/Epiphone fret sizes, as is the increased string tension, but again that's to be expected switching to such a different style guitar. Within a few minutes of playing it, I knew it would be fine with time and practice. And my fingers no longer feel like they're tripping over each other trying to play chords on the standard sized frets. The bridge itself is nothing special. It does exactly what's needed of it and feels good to play with. I'm more of a Tune-O'Matic fan typically, but I've had no issues playing with this bridge whatsoever. Strings stay where they belong, and things like palm muting work without any adjusting of technique, something I've had to do on Floyd Rose bridges in the past. It doesn't do anything particularly noteworthy, but I also have absolutely no complaints about it.Now onto the sound. These pickups sound like they should be on a pricier guitar, or something I would eventually upgrade to. Crisp clean tone. Great rock sound with gain. And a beefy metal chug that gets that nice crunch when you mute and punches when you're not muting with distortion cranked. Having a 5 way toggle is really nice for versatility. Though the bridge coil split is a little chimey and the neck split just kind of sounds like a slightly muted take on the neck pickup. But I like having extra options for sound and there will definitely be places I can utilize those extra options when writing. I have other guitars with warmer clean tones, but this guitar sounds just fine without any gain. With gain is where this thing shines. These pups are hot. Almost too hot. I can get pinches and natural harmonics with very minimal effort, but that can easily backfire when switching chords if my transition isn't seamless as I'll get brief accidental harmonics if I don't lift my fingers cleanly. I actually like this though, as it forces me to work harder at playing properly and correcting some lazy habits I've gotten into. So while it's initially a little irritating, it's making me a better player. My only real complaint about these pups is that they're not great for height adjustment. There's a little play, but nothing too substantial. Fine adjustments at best. But I'm really nitpicking with that complaint. They sound fantastic and are very versatile. And thanks to the through-body string setup, dense wood body, and pups, the sustain on this guitar is truly impressive. While on the subject of complaints though, a common one people have made about this is true for me as well. The tuning heads aren't very good. They're perfectly functional in what they do. They hold tune fairly well, occasionally dropping up to a quarter step on the low end when not in use, but hold tune while playing. Same issue I've experienced on most split headstocks. There's a lot of play when tuning and it leads to a lot of extra turns to make significant adjustments. I will definitely be replacing these with decent locking ones down the road. But they're adequate for what they're needed for stock.So to wrap things up, I'm incredibly happy with this guitar. It looks amazing. Sounds fantastic. Has a rock solid build that feels like it'll be with me for many many years. The only thing about it I'd change is the tuners, an easy and fairly cheap upgrade, and I'd like to lower the action more without fret buzz. The second might be possible. I plan to keep working on it. The Omen Elite doesn't do anything really new or innovative with guitars, but it does what it's designed to do incredibly well. There's just so much Schecter did right with this guitar, that the couple things they didn't are able to be easily forgiven. For under $600, I really can't recommend it enough. I bought an Ibanez for slightly more back in the late 90s and that thing stock was absolute garbage by comparison (I've since modded it and it's pretty decent, but still not as good as this). This guitar plays, sounds, and feels like a guitar that should cost at least another $200-$300. I'm extremely happy with my purchase and I know I'll be playing this for many years to come! That said, the fret buzz, high action, and bad tuners kept this from getting a perfect score out of me. I still highly recommend it and have zero regrets about buying it, but it's not quite the perfect guitar. Even if it has quickly become my favorite that I own.Update 02/25/25:Nothing has really changed about my opinions of this guitar, but a few minor things have come to light that I thought I'd add. First off, I was finally able to adjust the pickup height a little more with a precision screwdriver set. This is helpful as I was able to alleviate a little of the bridge pickup having that accidental harmonic issue, and I was able to lower the neck significantly, as the low on that almost drowns out your sound with high gain and scooped mids on the amp. Lowering both didn't diminish the sound quality, but really helped with that almost "too much" problem these hot pickups have. Second, I just wanted to update on those issues I was having playing on this at first. After owning this about a month, I have adjusted a great deal to it and my playing overall has improved as a result. The downside is that standard fret sizes now feel almost like playing a kid's toy guitar by comparison. My advice, especially starting out with this, use your pinky for things like power chords until you adjust to the larger frets. I've been a index/ring finger player for years, and am getting back to doing so, but there's a learning curve with these larger frets that using your pinky helps familiarize yourself with for that adjustment.Update 03/24/24:I figure if you've stuck with my incredibly long review this far, you might want some closure on how I feel about this guitar several months in. If anything, I love this guitar even more as time goes on. It's really inspired me to get back into writing on a more serious level again. My comfort and ability playing it improves a little every time I pick it up, and seeing it in the stand makes me want to play it, if only for a few minutes in between activities. Before I bought this, I worried if getting a 7-string was going to be a gimmicky thing that I get bored with and go back to 6 after a few months, but instead adding those 5 extra notes has really opened up how I play. I really hate changing tunings, and with this I can get the low metal sounds I love while still having full access to standard EADGBE tuning. I'm so glad I got this instead of going cheap with the Jackson. The only caveat, and this is true for all guitars purchased online, is that it's necessary to know or learn how to do a proper setup, and this one really put my knowledge to the test. But it was very much worth it. Unless something crazy happens with pieces randomly breaking or the whole thing falls apart on me, this is my definitive closing opinions on this guitar: It's well worth every penny it costs and every minute needed to set up.
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