Not having any personal experience with the Prodigy model, I looked at the manual and noticed a bass control on the back panel and read about the rear facing bass driver. Without knowing what your setup is - speaker placement in relation to the walls, what the room dimensions are and whether the speakers are against the shorter wall or longer wall, what equipment you have, etc, it's a little difficult to begin a diagnosis.
Adjusting speaker placement without treatments is where I usually begin, along with seating location which hopefully is not backed up against a wall. Suffice it to say, if your speakers are too close to the front wall that can be problematic also. Tilting the Prodigy which changes the rake of the panel can be effective. With your speakers having a rear facing driver you could also try increasing the toe angle greatly and sitting closer which could have a dramatic effect on the bass.
When my audio setup was in a different room arrangement I forced myself to arrange the speakers along the long wall, and then the short wall of a 13'x23' room, I settled on the short wall due to not wanting to sit against a wall. I had bass problems until I brought the speakers 6' away from the front wall and spread them apart forcing a stronger toe-in, and I sat about the same distance away as both speakers were apart. I only found this arrangement by throwing out all information I ever read and spent a couple weeks trying goofy ideas like placing the speakers in the middle of the room, or sit way too close or too far away, trying toe-out and major toe-in, changing tilt, etc. I did all this prior to any room treatment or eq. Once I reached a plateau of diminishing returns, I began treating the room.
If you have a preamp which has parametric eq you can target specific ranges of frequency to adjust.