A comfy and robust gaming chair for all shapes and sizes.
Gaming chairs often get a bad rap. They’ve long been associated with teenage bedrooms, poor build quality, and garish extras nobody actually needs or asks for, all sold at a higher price merely because they stuck “gaming” on the box somewhere.
At first glance, the Vertagear PL4800 looks like it’d fall foul of the same problems and be yet another gaming chair in an unstoppable deluge of them. However, after a week of use, I’m convinced this is an unexpected winner. Comfy, stable, and feature-rich without feeling gimmicky, it’s also a surprise star for the ‘big and tall’ user.
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The Vertagear PL4800 shares a lot of features with other brands, like the ever-popular Secret Lab – in particular the multi-angle tilt mechanism that lets you not just lean the chair back, but also adjust the entire seating angle for your comfort. Adjustability is the main goal here, with everything from the angle of the backrests to the tilt of the arms able to be easily moved into the positions you need them.
With all those moving parts, levers, and mechanisms though, I did have a few problems when putting the chair together. It’s all packaged very nicely to give you that ‘premium gaming experience’, but it doesn’t feel like the budget extended to the instructions. There was a lot of guesswork and squinting at tiny, blurry photographs, and then I inevitably messed it up, put the tilt mechanism on backwards, and had to take it all apart and start from scratch. Gamers like me aren’t built for this type of hard labour. At least not for realsies.
This isn’t a problem you’ll be thinking about a month later, but when the rest of the ‘experience’ feels so high-quality – right down to the cardboard tubes on the casters being in the Vertagear colours – having little more than a Wikihow guide to build the thing was a crack in the façade I wasn’t expecting.
Fortunately, the instructions are more or less where my complaints with the PL4800 end. Aesthetically, it’s a very ‘gamer’ design, with holes in the headrest and racing stripes to make sure you game faster or something, but with attractive colourways and nice touches like chrome adjustment buttons and wheels that match the colour of the fabric, it all comes together into a design that somehow screams ‘Gamer’ without feeling too gauche.
Of course, if you want to be an even Radder Gamer, you can pick up the optional LED lighting upgrade kit to fit on the backrest and underneath the casters – but I think it looks just as nice without them.
Build quality is easily where the PL4800 shines the most, though. The materials feel high-quality and comfortable. On the seat, the fabric feels soft, but also robust enough to take long-term use. The padding is plush, and even the lumbar support at the bottom of the backrest feels substantial without twisting your spine out of alignment. After sitting on an ageing Secret Lab chair for many years, moving up to this was one hell of an improvement.
Perhaps the most impressive thing about the PL4800 is the rock-solid support it gives you while you’re sitting. I’m not the smallest person in the world, but as it’s designed to support people up to 6’8” and 400lbs, it’s not made so much as an awkward creaking noise, despite all my wriggling, adjusting, and fidgeting. There’s none of that annoying ‘give’ chairs often have, where you get it into position and then it still wiggles around ever so slightly just to mess with you – once this thing is locked into position, it’s not going anywhere until you tell it to.
Of course, it’s harder to gauge how well elements like the gas lift and the tilt mechanisms will hold up in a year or two. This isn’t marketed as a 24-hour chair – very few gaming chairs are – but if they’re as robust as the rest of the chair, there should be no concerns that this’ll be worthwhile in the long-term. ‘Gaming’ is often code for ‘form over function’, but Vertagear has managed to successfully balance the two.
Vertagear isn’t reinventing the wheel with the PL4800. Instead of going for flashy new features or attention-grabbing gimmicks, it’s happy to focus on perfecting the basics. It’s comfortable, sturdy and will look nice both in an office or a home streaming setup. Most of all, it manages to support a huge range of body types without conceding any of that sleekness in the process. For fellow bigguns who’ve had bad experiences with gaming equipment in the past, this is an unexpected lifesaver of a chair.
A sample was provided by Vertagear for the purposes of this review.
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TheGamer's Tabletop Editor and Verified Card Boy, covering all things Magic: the Gathering, Pokemon, Yu-Gi-Oh!, Dungeons & Dragons, and more. His favourite Pokemon is Porygon, and his favourite Commander is Kwain, Itinerant Meddler!