PLEASE do not judge equipment until you have a proper set up room.
There are those around here and other forums who constantly pound this message but I'm not so sure we're very good listeners. We want the shiny new toys and expect profound improvement. When we don't hear those improvements we lie to ourselves or lean on unreliable auditory memory to pass judgement.
I'm also pretty new to the depths and details about what "good" sound requires. Exactly how important the room is to what we hear is finally sinking in. Behind speakers it's probably the second biggest influence on overall sound but the least understood. Not new and shiny or sexy but big enough, as you suggest, to mask pretty much any improvement we're expecting from the gear.
The past couple of weeks I've been leaning on MATT
https://www.acousticsciences.com/musical-articulation-test-tones-matt/ and REW
https://www.roomeqwizard.com/ to measure and understand room effects. I highly recommend both.
Another highly valued resource is Audio Check
https://www.audiocheck.net/. MATT can be found at Audio Check along with plenty of other helpful auditory room analysis tools. Native DSD Audiophile Hi-Res System Test and Speaker Set Up are also excellent sources to check your system performance against well documented references.
I'd suggest starting with MATT. Simply listen to the test (28 - 780 - 28 Hz sweep) through cans for reference and compare to playback through your speakers to hear room effects. If you can, record your room for playback comparison. As shown in the attached comparison (listening positions 1 and 2) you can both hear and see how your room responds. It's pretty amazing and depressing but it seems to lay bare why and how our rooms play such a critical role. Unlike the unreliable and ill informed A/B ish comparisons we're typically limited to the MATT test results are obvious, repeatable, and easily comparable. The LP1 resonances were enough to rattle the walls and create some distortion that I feared would damage the speakers. For reference I had the volume set for the MATT baseline file to play at 85dB peak at LP1 which is 80" from the baffle centers at floor level.
Relative to the cost of the gear, a couple of hundred for a mic (UMIK-1 recommended for REW) and stand and modest donations to Audio Check and REW are easy investments. I'm not sure where all this is going to lead but I'm not making any gear changes until the room is a good as it can be within my budget. That may require selling off some gear to pay for more and better treatments.
For anyone just getting started please, please, please, make sure the second line item in your budget is treatments. And don't blindly throw treatments at the room and call it done. The treatments I have show measurable improvements in REW but I have a long way to go before the room is good. And the gear can only be as good as the room so don't expect miracles.


