How many of you believe in MQA?


I have recently purchased a Bluesound Node 2i.  The dealer suggested I connect the Bluesound by way of digital coax to a Pro-Ject S2 DAC by way of RCA anologue to my ARCAM AVR550.  However, I found out I will not be able to control my Bluesound with an iPhone, iPad or PC notebook.  The only way to hear MQA completely unfolded is to plug in a computer USB.  This would mean I would have to get up from where I am sitting, go to the computer to change songs and albums.  I believe the Pro-Ject RS2 DAC would work, but not sure what the sales price is or if this is a good option.

The dealer asked me why I wanted to even bother listening to MQA completely unfolded when the DAC sounded better than the DAC inside the Bluesound.  He thinks MQA is way over rated and it may not be around a year from now.  If I hook things up with the Pro-Ject S2 DAC I will be able to hear one unfold which would be at 24 bit/88.2 kHz.  If I do this, I will be giving up the opportunity to hear MQA recordings recorded at 24 bit/96 kHz or 24 bit/192 kHz.  

How many of you are enbracing MQA?  
128x128larry5729
PS - Before anyone says it's my hearing, I had an old DAC and a new DAC at the same time and was able to compare side by side.



@erik_squires 
192 is not inherently superior to 96 is not superior to 44.1. This is a marketing myth....

Mathematically, this is correct,
How so?
One has 24 bit word length, the other 16; one goes up to 192kHz, or 96kHz  (i.e. 2-4 octaves higher) whereas the redbook up to 44.1kHz. They cannot be mathematically identical; you are thinking of something else, no?

Hi @Gregm,
I meant that in theory, humans should not be able to hear better than 44/16.


@Brianlucey @bkepke and @iopscprl  I agree with you three the most of this forum's posters.  I've heard MQA at audio shows and cannot remember the equipment.  Overall, I wasn't impressed.  The rooms had a spacious, wide sound but nothing wanted me to opt for that sound.   When the differences are marginally better, I'll stick to the easier to use technologies such as the CD (ha ha my LPs and 78s are not easier to use but I have 32,000 of them).   I have a SOTA listening room which is a good place to begin serious listening.  I thought the ayon/lumenwhite room using my LPs and CDs sounded great, second best sound at the LA audio show for two years running in 2016 and 2017.    
@brianlucey


+1 thanks for that great explanation as it’s what I’ve thought was the case thru my research

not sure why anyone would want to pay (licensing fees) a proprietary format that turns a lossless file into a lossy one so that only “special” hardware can decode it. 
Money grab pure and simple.