Quick Answer

Buy a cardioid USB mic, not a multi-pattern one, for solo streaming. The HyperX SoloCast (R1,200) and FIFINE K669 (R900) handle a single voice in a small room; the Shure MV7 (~R5,500) is the step up if you go XLR later. Pattern choice matters more than headline price.

Pickup Pattern Is the Real Decision

For solo streaming you want cardioid, which records the front and rejects sides and rear. Omnidirectional grabs the whole room and is wrong for a noisy res. Multi-pattern mics like the HyperX QuadCast S (~R2,200) add bidirectional and stereo modes, but you pay for options you may never switch to. Set gain so your voice peaks around -12dB and the noise floor stays under it.

USB Beats XLR Until It Doesn't

USB mics plug straight in with no interface and suit family tech buyers who want one cable and clean voice now. The FIFINE K669 (R900) and HyperX SoloCast (R1,200) are honest entry picks. XLR mics like the Shure MV7 (~R5,500) need a R1,500+ interface but open a real upgrade path. Start USB; move to XLR only when a second mic or a mixer enters the plan.

TIP

mic to cardioid, position it a fist-width from your mouth, and trim gain so your voice peaks near -12dB to keep res noise out of the stream.

FAQ

Is a USB mic good enough for streaming on Twitch?

Yes. A cardioid USB mic like the HyperX SoloCast (~R1,200) delivers clear, broadcast-ready voice straight into OBS or Streamlabs with no interface. XLR only pays off once you add a second mic or a mixer.

Do I need a boom arm with my microphone?

Not to start, but it helps. A R600-R1,200 arm lifts the mic off the desk, frees space and cuts typing noise. Confirm the thread matches and your desk edge is under 60mm thick.

What is the cheapest decent streaming mic at Evetech?

The FIFINE K669 sits near R900 and clearly beats any laptop mic. Step up to a HyperX SoloCast (R1,200) or QuadCast S (R2,200) for better noise rejection and a tap-to-mute control.