The speakers have a glossy finish and stand tall with a division line running in the center from top to bottom. They feature a tapering design with the base being rather broad and narrowing upwards. The division line breaks its rhythm to make space for an oval shaped vent at the top and the 2-inch driver towards the bottom. The drivers are exposed and the cone is covered with a chrome-finish sticker. This makes the drivers look like neodymium drivers, even though they are just concave drivers. The exposed drivers are a little submerged and the possibility of the space collecting dust is high; especially with the glossy finish it's going to be surely noticeable.
Coming to the sub-woofer, it is aptly named 'Baby Boomer' considering its little size. It can be moved around with just a hand's effort as it weighs approximately half as much as a volley ball. The woofer is a down firing type and the 4-inch driver is exposed to the floor. The vent sits upfront and there is a matte silver lining that runs across.
The rear of the sub-woofer is almost clean. There is just a knob to adjust the bass level and a 3.5mm jack as the output port for the satellite speakers. The fact that there is provision for bass control is surprising, but this helps the Z103 bag a few brownie points.
Such a poorly written review. Seems like the reviewer hardly spent more than 20 minutes writing it and was in a hurry to finish it off. There is hardly anything mentioned about the performance of the speakers.