If you’re unfamiliar with gaming cockpits, they often act as all-in-one gaming chairs with a built-in desk at your fingertips, suspended monitors for ultimate immersion, and sometimes additions like footrests and cup holders. Just think of the perfect e-racing or flight simulator. The problem up until this point, aside from the four-figure cost they usually ship with, is the amount of space they take up.
Instead of using the gaudy scorpion tail design to dangle multiple displays like the Acer Predator Thronos, Razer’s Project Brooklyn opts for a more understated approach, hinging on a single 60-inch foldable OLED display that gives seamless panoramic vision and can be tucked away into the body of the chair at the press of a button when not in use.