In a fresh development, june 16-July 31: LiberNovo offers its lowest prices ever.
In a fresh development, from June 16 to July 31, all three are available at super early-bird pricing — discounts exceeding 43% off MSRP, the lowest pricing LiberNovo has ever offered. For anyone who has been waiting for the right moment to address the weakest link in their setup, that moment is now. LiberNovo is simultaneously launching three fresh chairs: the Maxis, designed specifically for big and tall users; the Omni Pro, a high-end model featuring electric seat ventilation; and the Omni SE, an accessible entry-level option.
According to the latest update, and if you’re a bigger, taller person, you’ve almost certainly spent years making peace with seating that was never actually designed for you. If you’re a developer who clocks ten-hour coding sessions, or a competitive gamer deep into ranked queues that stretch well past midnight, you already know that your chair matters more than almost any other piece of devices at your desk.
As part of the ongoing story, liberNovo is here to change that conversation.
Industry observers note that that’s the lowest pricing LiberNovo has ever offered, and it won’t last. The headline act, however, is the Maxis Series—a large-format chair engineered from the ground up for big and tall users, accommodating frames from 5’10” to 6’7″ and supporting up to 399 lbs. The Hong-Kong based ergonomic chair maker is launching three fresh chairs—the Maxis, Omni Pro, and Omni SE—and from June 16 to July 31, all three are available at super early-bird pricing, with discounts exceeding 43% off MSRP.
Industry observers note that pre-order Maxis series from $809 / £719 instead of $1,299 / £1,099.
In a fresh development, the proportions change; the engineering doesn’t. Headrests lack sufficient range of motion for longer necks. Armrests are too narrow or too short for broader frames. Seat cushions are too shallow, leaving longer legs unsupported and cutting off circulation. Recline mechanisms that feel stable at 160 lbs become unpredictable at 280. The chair accommodates you, technically—it just doesn’t actually support you. The dirty secret of the ergonomic chair market is that most large-format models are simply scaled-up standard designs.
The report highlights that liberNovo’s response is the Maxis, and the difference in philosophy is immediately apparent in the specification sheet.
Industry observers note that most chairs offer a narrow adjustment window that leaves broad-shouldered or long-necked users perpetually chasing a comfortable position. The Maxis headrest offers 140mm of vertical adjustment and 120mm of horizontal travel, combined with a U-shaped curve engineered to cradle the cervical spine naturally. For taller users who’ve simply given up on headrests working properly, this is a genuine revelation. Start with the headrest.
As part of the ongoing story, at 430mm across the shoulder span and 520mm at the waist, it’s built to provide complete coverage for larger builds rather than partial contact that creates pressure points. A flared base design relieves hip pressure during extended sessions—a small detail with a significant impact on comfort across a long workday or tech industry marathon. The backrest follows the same logic.
The report highlights that liberNovo’s customized arc design uses a streamlined curve that avoids compressing the waist—a surprisingly common frustration for bigger users with standard chairs. Extended adjustment range means your arms can rest naturally at desk height without pushing against your abdomen, keeping your shoulders relaxed and your wrists in a neutral position whether you’re typing out a pull request or executing a team fight. The armrests deserve particular mention for programmers and esports users alike.
According to the latest update, full thigh support eliminates the dangling legs problem that undermines circulation and accelerates fatigue, making the difference between two comfortable hours and eight. The seat itself measures 52cm in depth—a specification that addresses one of the most common complaints among taller users.
According to the latest update, rather than the abrupt drop that makes reclining in a heavy-use chair feel risky, the Maxis engages progressively based on angle and weight, delivering smooth, predictable support throughout the recline range. No sudden drops. No wobble. Just controlled, confident comfort. Finally, the 6-spring Controlled Recline System tackles the instability issue head-on.
Industry observers note that research underpinning the design notes that we shift posture an average of 13 times per hour—over a standard workday, that’s more than 127 unconscious adjustments. Static chairs can’t keep up. The Maxis moves with you. The Maxis also carries LiberNovo’s ecosystem-wide engineering advantages: a Bionic Flexfit BackRest with eight flexible panels, an ErgoPulse electric lumbar motor that maintains your spine’s natural S-curve as you move, and a Dynamic Support System with 60 precision joints reacting in milliseconds across four synchronized mechanisms.
In a fresh development, the early-bird pricing window running to July 31 makes this the right moment to act. For programmers spending their careers at a desk, or competitive gamers treating their setup as a serious investment, the Maxis represents what large-format ergonomic seating should have always been.
As part of the ongoing story, it’s time to stop. Your body has been compensating for chairs that don’t fit.
Industry observers note that pre-order Maxis series from $809 / £719 instead of $1,299 / £1,099.
The report highlights that the Omni Pro is aimed at demanding people and comes with electric seat ventilation—useful for long working days in summer or warm offices. The Omni SE offers the ergonomic core functions with manual adjustment and is the more affordable entry-level variant. In addition to the Maxis, LiberNovo is expanding the series with two other variants.
According to the latest update, liberNovo Maxis plus Omni Pro, and Omni SE have super early-bird pricing is available from June 16 to July 31 at libernovo.com.
As part of the ongoing story, deliveries of the Omni Pro and Omni SE are already underway, with the Maxis to follow from August 10, 2026.