A charger that actually fits in your pocket stops being a thing you remember to pack
In the quiet calculus of modern mobility, the tools we carry to sustain our devices have long betrayed us with their bulk — a contradiction Ugreen now addresses with two accessories designed to disappear into daily life. The Nexode Air 65W charger and MagFlow Air power bank, released in Singapore in mid-2026, distill years of miniaturization engineering into objects that ask almost nothing of the space we give them. Their arrival is less a disruption than a quiet correction: power, finally, proportioned to the lives it serves.
- Travelers and mobile workers have long carried an invisible tax — the weight and bulk of chargers that dwarf the devices they feed.
- Ugreen's Airpyra stacked architecture shrinks a full 65W charger by 74%, collapsing the gap between what power delivery demands and what a jacket pocket will tolerate.
- The MagFlow Air answers a different frustration: a 13.9mm-thin power bank with built-in USB-C cable and Qi2 wireless charging removes the last excuse for a dead phone mid-journey.
- Multi-layer thermal and circuit protection on both devices signals that compactness was not purchased at the cost of longevity or safety.
- Priced at S$42.90 and S$85.90 respectively, both products are now available in Singapore, positioning themselves as practical upgrades rather than luxury indulgences.
Ugreen's latest accessories are built around a single, honest observation: the gear that powers your devices shouldn't outweigh or outlast the devices themselves in your bag. The Nexode Air 65W charger and MagFlow Air power bank are the company's answer to that friction, designed for people who measure convenience in grams and cubic centimeters.
The Nexode Air 65W is the more striking of the two. Through a densely packed internal architecture Ugreen calls Airpyra, the charger achieves a 74% reduction in size compared to a standard 65W adapter — genuinely pocket-sized, not merely compact by comparison. It still delivers full 65W output for MacBooks, iPads, and iPhones, and includes real-time temperature monitoring that throttles power delivery when heat builds, protecting both the charger and the devices connected to it over years of daily use.
The MagFlow Air power bank approaches portability differently. Its 10,000mAh capacity is aimed at sustaining a phone through a long day rather than rescuing a laptop. At just 13.9mm thick, it slips into a bag without notice, and its Qi2-certified 15W wireless charging means iPhones charge simply by resting on top of it. A built-in USB-C cable eliminates one more loose accessory. Ugreen's Dymondcell battery technology, backed by a 13-layer protection system, addresses the quiet concern that comes with charging something every single day — that eventually, something will fail.
Both products are available now in Singapore at S$42.90 and S$85.90. They won't redefine what charging means, but they represent the kind of careful, cumulative refinement that makes a real difference in practice — gear that finally earns its place in the bag.
Ugreen has released two new charging accessories built around a simple premise: the gear that powers your devices shouldn't be bigger than the devices themselves. The Nexode Air 65W charger and MagFlow Air power bank represent the company's latest push into ultra-portable power, aimed squarely at people who live out of a backpack or a carry-on.
The Nexode Air 65W is the headline piece. Using what Ugreen calls its Airpyra stacked architecture—essentially a clever way of packing components more densely—the charger is 74% smaller than a standard 65W power adapter. That's not marketing hyperbole about "compact for its class." This thing is genuinely pocket-sized, small enough that it disappears into a jacket pocket or laptop bag without notice. Despite the miniaturization, it still delivers the full 65W of power needed to charge a MacBook Air, iPad Pro, or iPhone at speed. The charger includes intelligent temperature monitoring that watches heat levels in real time, throttling power delivery if things get warm, which keeps the device safe and stable over years of daily use.
The MagFlow Air power bank takes a different approach to the portability problem. At 10,000mAh capacity, it won't fully charge a laptop, but it's designed for something more practical: keeping your phone alive through a long day or a flight. The key feature is Qi2-certified 15W wireless charging, which means you can set your iPhone on top of it and watch the battery climb without fumbling with cables. The power bank itself is only 13.9mm thick—thinner than most phones—and it includes a built-in USB-C cable, so you're not adding another cord to your bag. Inside, Ugreen uses what it calls Dymondcell battery technology, which relies on premium ATL lithium-ion cells. The company has wrapped this in a 13-layer protection system that handles temperature management, overcharge prevention, and circuit-level safeguards, the kind of redundancy that matters if you're charging your phone every single day for years.
Both products are available now in Singapore. The Nexode Air 65W charger costs S$42.90, while the MagFlow Air power bank is priced at S$85.90. They're being sold through Ugreen's official channels, including the company's online stores and retail partners. The target customer is clear: someone who travels frequently, works from coffee shops or airports, and has learned that carrying the right gear makes the difference between a smooth day and a frustrating one. These aren't revolutionary products—wireless charging and compact power supplies have existed for years—but they represent the kind of incremental refinement that matters in practice: a charger that actually fits in your pocket, a power bank that doesn't add weight, safety systems that let you stop thinking about whether your gear will fail.
Citações Notáveis
The charger is compact enough to slip into a pocket and smaller than some wireless earbuds cases— Ugreen product specification
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Why does a charger this small matter? Aren't there already compact chargers on the market?
There's compact, and then there's actually pocket-sized. The difference is whether you'll actually carry it. A charger that's 74% smaller than the standard version crosses a threshold—it stops being a thing you remember to pack and becomes something that just lives in your bag.
But doesn't making something that small compromise the power output?
That's the engineering problem Ugreen solved. It still delivers 65W, which is enough for a MacBook. The stacked architecture lets them fit the same components into a much tighter space without cutting corners on what the charger can do.
What about the power bank? 10,000mAh seems modest compared to larger options.
It's modest by design. The point isn't to charge your laptop—it's to get your phone through a day when you can't reach an outlet. At 13.9mm thick, it's something you'd actually carry. A bigger power bank becomes another thing to lug around.
The wireless charging angle is interesting. Why does that matter more than just having a cable?
Because you don't have to think about it. You set your phone down, it charges. No cable management, no fumbling in the dark. For someone on the move constantly, that friction reduction adds up.
What's the real differentiator here—the technology or the form factor?
The form factor is the technology. Anyone can build a 65W charger or a 10,000mAh power bank. The skill is making it small enough that people actually want to carry it every day.