The Anker MagGo Magnetic Charging Station 8-in-1, aka the Orb, is $99.99 — about $30 more than the regular magnetic Qi version. It has two USB-A ports and two USB-C ports and can support up to 67W total power output, including up to 15W from the Qi2 charger (it can support a lot more through its three AC outlets). You can get a real desk octopus going here, or replace an entire power strip’s worth of chargers. Ponder that, if you will.
Anker is also announcing:
- A wireless charger pad with a five-foot cable and AC adapter for $20.99
- A 10,000mAh power bank with a kickstand and LCD display ($89.99, available Jan 8th)
- A three-in-one charging stand that looks quite a lot like Belkin’s ($89.99, available in February)
- And a three-in-one charging pad with pop-up Qi2 and Apple Watch chargers ($99.99, coming in April 2024)
Up to 15W with Qi2-certified iPhones: From my limited testing, all three Qi2 chargers seem to charge my iPhone 14 Pro at up to 15W, just like an Apple MagSafe charger. Apple and charger manufacturers always say “up to 15W” because the iPhone won’t always use all that power. It’ll hit 15W for a bit if the battery is particularly low, then drop the rate as it fills up or if the phone gets too hot. In my experience, that mostly meant charge rates of about 12 or 13W.
Up to 7.5W with non-certified iPhones: The iPhone 13 and 14 series became Qi2 compatible with iOS 17.2. My spouse’s iPhone 14 Pro, which was still on iOS 17.1, topped out at 7.5W — the maximum rate for Qi v1 wireless charging, magnetic or otherwise — until I updated the software.
Up to 5W with Qi v1 devices: I also tested the folding three-in-one charger with a Samsung Galaxy S22. The S22 can charge at up to 10W with a standard Qi charger — or a MagSafe-compatible charger like the Anker 313 charging pad — but maxed out at 5W with Qi2. So if you’re someone, like my editor Dan Seifert, who slaps magnetic rings on the backs of Android phones so you can use magnetic Qi accessories, you don’t need to rush to upgrade to Qi2 just yet.
Qi v2.0 also contains “an enhancement to the existing wireless charging Extended Power Profile (EPP) that does not include magnets but complies with the Qi v 2.0 standard,” and Qi v2.0 devices will all be interoperable, so it’s conceivable that older devices without magnets could get Qi v2.0 compatibility via software update. The Verge has reached out to the Wireless Power Consortium to ask if that’s possible.
The appeal of Qi2 for iPhone users is that it gives you real MagSafe charge rates for less money, and there are already so many more Qi2 chargers announced than there ever were official MagSafe-certified chargers.
The going rate for a MagSafe-certified three-in-one charger is about $150, excluding sales. Anker’s Qi2 three-in-ones range from $90 to $110. The basic Qi2 charging pad is $21 with an AC adapter; Apple’s MagSafe charger is $40 without, and Belkin’s MagSafe pad is $30 without an AC adapter and $40 with.
The only thing I can think of that official MagSafe does and Qi2 doesn’t is remember which Standby display you want on which charger. But we’re already seeing sales on some MagSafe-certified chargers to bring the prices closer to Qi2, so maybe this tide will lift even that boat.
Photography by Nathan Edwards / The Verge