Bass Boost for Chrome — Deeper Low-End Audio
Add bass to any Chrome tab with the one-tap Bass Boost EQ preset or the equalizer's low bands. Saved per site. Works on music, video, and podcasts.
Updated
Some headphones and laptop speakers roll off low frequencies noticeably. Other content is simply mastered thin. SuperchargeAudio adds low-end weight through its 10-band equalizer — either with the one-tap Bass Boost preset or by raising the low bands yourself.
There is no separate “bass knob” to learn. Bass lives in the same equalizer that shapes the rest of the sound, so a boost stacks cleanly with any other curve and saves per site like everything else.
Two Ways to Add Bass
| Method | Speed | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Bass Boost preset | One tap | A quick, ready-made low-end lift |
| Manual low bands (32 / 64 / 125 Hz) | Hands-on | Precise, surgical shaping |
Pick the preset when you just want more weight now. Reach for the bands when a specific frequency needs attention — a boomy 125 Hz to tame, or sub-bass at 32 Hz to bring up.
The Bass Boost Preset
Selecting Bass Boost from the preset list applies a low-shelf-weighted curve: a strong lift at the bottom that tapers off through the mids, with a slight trim up top so the low end stays the focus. It is one of ten built-in presets, alongside Vocal/Voice, Treble, Loudness, Rock, Pop, Electronic, Acoustic, Small Speakers, and Flat.
Applied in real time, the change is audible the instant you select it. Choose Flat to return to unprocessed audio.
Manual Low-End with the Equalizer
The equalizer exposes three bands in the bass region — 32 Hz, 64 Hz, and 125 Hz — each adjustable up to ±12 dB. The 32 Hz band is a low shelf, so it lifts everything beneath it; 64 and 125 Hz are peaking bands for targeted shaping.
A common starting point: +6 dB at 64 Hz for punch, a smaller lift at 32 Hz for sub weight, and 125 Hz left flat to avoid muddiness. Save the curve and it sticks to that site.
Combining with Volume Boost
Bass shaping and volume boost sit at different stages of the chain, so they layer without interfering. For quiet, thin-sounding content:
- Use volume boost to raise the overall level
- Apply the Bass Boost preset for low-end weight
- Fine-tune individual bands if anything sounds off
Privacy
All processing is local — no audio leaves your browser. Your per-site EQ settings are stored in extension storage on your device. No account, no telemetry, nothing transmitted.
Questions? support@superchargebrowser.com
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I boost bass in Chrome?
Should I use the Bass Boost preset or adjust the bands manually?
Does bass boost work on all sites?
Will turning bass all the way up damage my speakers?
Is my bass setting saved per site?
Related Features
10-Band Equalizer for Chrome — Shape Any Audio
A 10-band EQ (32 Hz–16 kHz, ±12 dB) with 10 named presets and per-site custom curves. Tune every Chrome tab to your headphones and content.
Spatial Audio for Chrome — Headphone Modes
Four headphone audio modes in Chrome: mono downmix, stereo width, 8D rotating pan, and crossfeed for natural headphone listening.
Volume Boost — Amplify Any Audio in Chrome
Boost Chrome audio up to 600% for quiet videos, podcasts, and calls. Works on any tab with full privacy — no account, no telemetry.
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