Skip to main content

Anker’s new desktop charger solved a problem I didn’t know I had

The Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station's front panel and ports.
Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

All I want from a charger is for it to work when I plug something into it and for it to be convenient so that it fits with my lifestyle. When I received Anker’s new Prime Charger devices, I wasn’t sure at first whether any would really fit into my lifestyle, but I was wrong.

Once I started testing one out, I discovered it was exactly what my living room was missing.

Recommended Videos

Multiport charging

The Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station charging a phone.
The Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

I’m talking about Anker’s new Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station, part of its latest Prime charger range. It’s a relatively small, but chunky GaN dock with six USB ports set in a piano black panel and surrounded by a ridged plastic body. On the underside are four rubber feet to keep it from slipping around, and on the back is a seriously thick removable AC power lead leading to the wall plug.

I charge a lot of different devices often and have, until now, made do with wall chargers plugged into extension leads and regularly unwrapped nests of USB cables that string across the floor while regularly forgetting which charger charged which device the fastest. The Anker Prime charging station solved this. It takes up a single plug in the extension lead, but has six ports of varying ability on the other end, with a total of 200W charging power spread across them.

The top of the Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station.
The Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

There are two USB-A ports and four USB-C ports, all with Anker’s ActiveSheild 3.0 power and temperature protections and its PowerIQ 3.0 technology. This means it supports several USB charging standards, including Qualcomm’s Quick Charge, Samsung’s Fast Charge, and Apple’s fast charging. I can charge an individual device at up to 100 watts. The specification is impressive, but the reason I warmed to it is more about its convenience than its ability.

Life on the shelf

A person plugging in the Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station.
The Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Extension leads are a pain. They slide around on the floor, and they mean cables are always snaking their way around the room. Mine are also inconveniently bundled down by the side of my couch. The Anker charger’s main power lead is more than a meter long, and I’ve found a convenient piece of shelf space for it in my living room, where it has changed everything. After I plugged it in, there were no more cables on the floor, and I no longer had to crawl around to either find the right cable, plug a new one in, or tidy them up.

It sits there, taking up very little space. It’s heavy at 561 grams, though, so it needs a sturdy shelf. I can immediately see what cables are plugged in, which ports are available, and if the device I want is on charge or not. Due to its huge power, I can charge everything I want from it, and it seems to deliver the fastest available speeds, too. It charges my Apple M1 MacBook Air without a problem, for example, meaning I don’t have to rely solely on the Apple charging block — I only own one — anymore.

Charging standards are confusing, and I wasn’t sure if the Anker charging station’s PowerIQ technology would handle Samsung’s fastest charging system, but the Galaxy Z Flip 6 shows “Super Fast Charging” on the screen when plugged into it, indicating it’s using the most amount of available energy. I’ve tested this with an older 100W Anker USB-C cable and its new 240W USB-C cable, and both activate Samsung’s fastest charging. It’s the same with the proprietary charging puck that comes with the Samsung Galaxy Watch 7, and I know the charging station works with Motorola’s TurboPower fast charging, as I also tried it with the Edge 50 Pro.

Other new Anker Prime products

The Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station isn’t the only new Anker Prime product coming out. I’ve also tried the new Prime Wall Charger, which delivers 100W charging across a pair of USB-C ports and a single USB-A port. Its folding wall socket prongs and convenient size make it handy for travel. Like the Charging Station, it activates Samsung’s Fast Charging and Motorola’s TurboPower.

The Anker 14-in-1 Workstation Dock is a far more complicated piece of hardware to integrate into your life, unlike the charging station and wall charger. It’s likely to be one of those products that directly solves a problem you are fully aware of rather than solving one you didn’t know you had in the first place.

Sitting vertically on the desk, the Workstation has two 10Gbps USB-C ports, a single 10Gbps USB-A port, and two 480Mbps USB-A ports, along with two 4K HDMI ports, an Ethernet port, and a 3.5mm headphone jack. At the top of the piano black front panel is a screen showing details on what port is charging, how much power is being used, and the data transfer speeds, with screens changed by pressing the top-mounted power button. The viewing angles are good, and it’s bright enough to be seen in a well-lit room.

Price and availability

The Anker 250W Charging Station.
The Anker 250W Charging Station Anker

When can you buy the new Anker Prime charging products, and how much do they cost? Let’s start with the Charging Station, which has been my personal favorite and costs $80, or 80 British pounds. It’s pricey for a charger, but considering the number of ports and the power available, it’s a decent value. The 100W Wall Charger is $85, or 85 pounds, while the new 240W USB-C cable costs $30 for a 3-foot version or $35 for the 6-foot cable. The 14-in-1 Workstation is a hefty piece of hardware for a hefty price, as it will set you back $250, or 200 pounds.

There is another new product in the Anker’s Prime range that I haven’t seen yet. It’s the 250W Prime Charging Station (seen in the image above), which is almost a hybrid of the Charging Station and Workstation. It has four USB-C ports on the front and two USB-A ports on the side, with a total power output of 250W. On the front is a screen showing charging speeds and power outputs, and a knob on the side lets you switch between different information panels. It costs $170, or 170 pounds. All of Anker’s new Prime charging products are available on Amazon starting today.

Problem solvers

The top of the Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station.
The Anker Supercharged Multi-port Desktop Charging Station Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Anker’s new Prime hardware has another common theme running across them all, and that’s the quality feel. Each product I’ve tried feels very substantial, with plenty of reassuring weight and hard-wearing plastic, along with solid cable connections for confidence. The 24-month warranty only adds to this feeling of getting a good product that the company believes in.

Chargers and workstations aren’t all that exciting, but for me, the Charging Station has easily fit into my life and solved a problem I hadn’t really thought about until now. It turned a situation I took for granted as “the way it is” and made it less of a pain, and because the hardware isn’t ugly or cheap, I can happily live with it on show in my living room.

I’ll take that kind of convenience over excitement, and I’m now contemplating ways to make good use of the even more technically impressive Workstation after this success.

Topics
Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
iPad Air (2025) vs. iPad Pro (2024)
Apple iPad Air M3 2025 vs iPad Pro M4 2024

The iPad Pro is Apple's premier tablet computer, that offers power identical to a MacBook in a more convenient and portable layout. It was announced in May last year and continues to serve as Apple's flagship iPad since then. Intriguingly though, Apple also announced an iPad Air at the same time last year with an M2 chip, and the same design was recently refurbished with M3 chips.

Superficially, both iPad models may seem very similar, especially since the iPad Air covers all the essential features from the iPad Pro, including support for the new Apple Pencil Pro, a similarly large footprint that will let you replace your laptop for most chores. Simultaneously, the $400 divide between the two devices must leave you wondering why Apple is charging extra for identical specs. The answer is complicated and more confusing than the comparison between the base iPad and the new iPad Air (2025).

Read more
Last chance to save $150 on the OnePlus 12 involves hidden-in-plain-sight deal
Person holding green OnePlus 12 phone in hands while playing games.

When you think of the best smartphones, there are some brands that come to mind first — Apple, Samsung, Google, and maybe even Motorola or Razr. But there's one brand that keeps making strides that's harder to remember unless you're really in the know, and that's OnePlus. The OnePlus 12 is a phone we called "the new Android phone to beat in 2024," which is a pretty staggering statement, even if you are up on the top phone brands. And recently that phone's 16GB RAM/512GB storage version has been on sale for $150, but the places to find the sale are shrinking.

Luckily, there is one place left to get it and it's hidden in plain sight. We're talking of course about the manufacturer's page itself, where the phone isn't listed as on sale but has a code "SPRING25" that allows you to save $150 on checkout instead, bringing the phone down to $750 from $900. Just yesterday you could save the same amount on the phone at Walmart, but that deal is now gone (though you can still for less than the usual $900).

Read more
You could be folding your iPad as soon as next year
A person holding the 13-inch iPad Air (2025).

The iPad Fold, as it's being touted, could arrive as soon as next year.

A new report suggests that the first folding iPad could be on track to land in 2026.

Read more