This has probably been my favorite purchase! Super versatile!Love this little portable mic!I needed an affordable audio solution for an upcoming video shoot that "may" need audio for an interview. All my audio gear is packed in storage and buying this was quicker than having a rental wireless kit shipped to my location.I tested the unit yesterday with my Panasonic S1H, and it worked great. The on-board mic sounds better than expected, and the supplied lav mic is acceptable. That lav mic port has a screw-on thread, which provides security. The wind muffler (aka "dead cat") is a pain to attach, and I hope I don't loose it. Deity should re-design this to twist on like the Rode Go II. Pairing transmitter and receiver is easy. The range of audio level control is 9 steps; plenty for my needs. The receiver reports the battery level of each unit, which is helpful. The rechargeable batteries may limit the lifespan of this product, but maybe Deity will offer a battery replacement service. At this low price, I'm not worried about it. BTW, if you are rocking a gimbal, the small and light weight of the receiver is a big advantage over bigger, heavier traditional wireless receivers. The unit comes with a few cables and the receiver supposedly auto-configures whatever device it is attached to. I don't expect the audio specs or wireless range to rival my Sennheiser wireless units, but it is certainly better than using any crappy on-camera mic, or an on-camera boom mic. Overall, I'm quite pleased with this unit, and glad to have it as a backup for when my "pro" audio gear is available.i wast not happy to see there was not a TRS cable but only a TRRS cable and a usb cShockingly, cs claims that they've never tested this device with Google's Pixel series of phones. It doesn't work with them. Straight Android does not recognize it as a microphone. You won't see it as an option in your native video nor Open Camera. You won't see it in any microphone test app or the browser versions. It won't matter what cable you use. It won't matter which adapter you use.It does work with a laptop or desktop and is recognized by Windows. So the device functions. I can't imagine a scenario that I want to use a wireless lavalier on with those devices, so I didn't test sound quality there.Look for something else if you're using Android devices.Changed audio way too much as compared to lav alone. Many wireless packages may compensate for mic placement by boosting high audio frequencies to counter lav placement under clothing, this is the first time I've encountered one that attenuates high frequencies on an already muffled signal.I was excited to get this after listening to some of the reviews on Youtube. Though it seems everyone who was sent one of these directly from Deity for review sounded great, while mine sounded nothing like what I've heard.I have a friend who also purchased, and has the same issue. Now after the product has been out, some of the comments on these videos are mentioning the same things.The self noise of this thing is insane (again, not like the reviews). I tried with both the included lav and the pack itself, same issue. I also tried plugging it into different cameras, audio interfaces, different lavs, and directly into a macbook. The sound meter on the device itself is nowhere near accurate as to what's actually being recorded (depending on levels off by 20db). No matter what I try, it sounds like a $5 lav mic.Maybe I got a bad copy and all the others work fine, who knows. What I do know is I just returned it.If you want a compact wireless microphone kit capable of natively working with both cameras and smartphones, the Diety is a very affordable option to the popular Rode Wireless Go. It has some really great features such as on device readout info about battery level, Db levels and pairing. It's USB-C charging and output plus USB to 3.5mm. I had some problems using it with my computer but that could be a drive issue. Beyond that, for the price, it's a solid bundle.