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Lepow's TriScreen Pro Packages a 27-Inch 4K Panel With Two Detachable 16-Inch Sides for $1,059

Lepow TriScreen Pro ships a 27-inch 4K IPS main with two detachable 16-inch WUXGA side panels for $1,059. CNC aluminum build, fiddly assembly, 60Hz.

What it is

Lepow TriScreen Pro is a three-panel monitor system priced at $1,059 direct from Lepow. The bundle includes a 27-inch 4K IPS main display, two detachable 16-inch WUXGA side panels, an HDMI cable, a USB-C cable, a power supply, and a carry case. TechRadar's review documents a month of daily use on both Mac and PC systems. Available at Lepow direct and on Amazon.

What's interesting

The concept is genuinely novel at this price point. TechRadar's review frames it clearly: the TriScreen Pro arrives as a main 27-inch display with two 16-inch panels that attach via proprietary connectors to the sides in either landscape or portrait orientation. For users who want a triple-monitor setup without sourcing three separate displays, a VESA arm system, and cable management, the TriScreen Pro is a single purchase that delivers the whole configuration.

The main panel is premium-tier specification. Lepow's product page documents 3840 x 2160 (4K UHD), IPS with 10-bit color, 98% DCI-P3 / 100% sRGB gamut, 500 nits brightness, and 178° viewing angle. Those specs compete with standalone 4K monitors in the $400-$500 range. The CNC aluminum construction adds a build-quality edge that cheaper monitors skip.

The side panels are where the compromise shows. TechRadar confirms 1920 x 1200 WUXGA resolution, 350 nits, 100% sRGB, 60 Hz. For viewing Slack, email, reference documents, or code while the main 4K handles the primary work, WUXGA is adequate. For expecting 4K detail across three screens, it is not.

Competitively, the TriScreen Pro's peer set is unusual. Traditional triple-monitor buyers assemble three 27-inch 4K monitors (ASUS ProArt PA279CRV at $400 × 3 = $1,200, plus a $150-$300 VESA triple arm, totaling $1,350-$1,500) or use a single ultrawide. The TriScreen Pro at $1,059 is notably cheaper than a comparable DIY triple-4K setup. The trade-off is the side-panel resolution compromise and the proprietary side-panel connector that locks buyers into Lepow's ecosystem. Lepow's triple-and-quad monitor collection shows the TriScreen Pro sits at the premium end of Lepow's own lineup.

What's missing or unverified

The connector mechanism needs refinement. TechRadar's review is specific: "the side panel connector mechanism is again a great innovation but just feels like it needs a little more refinement to ensure consistent, solid clipping the first time." Proprietary connectors are where long-term ownership risk shows up; if Lepow deprecates the connector in a future version, current TriScreen Pro owners cannot upgrade individual panels.

Assembly is a 10-minute project. The main display, side panels, stand, and cables all need to be properly connected. For someone who only assembles once and leaves it, this is a minor issue; for anyone who transports the setup, the carry case helps but the assembly friction remains.

60 Hz refresh is below current gaming-tier monitors. Gamers looking for 144 Hz or 240 Hz refresh rates for fast-paced titles should look elsewhere. Lepow's desktop monitor collection includes higher-refresh 5K monitors but not in a TriScreen configuration.

Side-panel 1920 x 1200 at 350 nits is visibly less sharp than the 4K 500-nit main when content spans screens. For users who do their primary work on one panel and reference materials on the sides, this is acceptable; for content creators who edit photos or video across multiple screens, it is not.

Who it's for

Buy the TriScreen Pro if you want a triple-monitor setup without DIY assembly, you primarily work in productivity apps (email, Slack, code, documents, spreadsheets) where the side panels serve as reference displays, and the single-purchase convenience justifies the premium over self-sourcing. Consultants, analysts, developers, and anyone running a traveling workstation are the core fit. Pass if you need high-refresh for gaming, if you do color-critical content creation across all three screens (the WUXGA side panels will feel limiting), or if you would rather source three individual monitors for long-term upgrade flexibility.

Verdict

68/100. The Lepow TriScreen Pro is a credible all-in-one triple-monitor solution at $1,059, with a premium main display and workable side panels. Buy it for productivity workflows where the single-purchase simplicity matters; self-source three monitors if you need flexibility or higher side-panel resolution.

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HOW THIS ARTICLE WAS MADE

This article was written by Dev, ProDrop’s Builder desk. It was fact-checked with a confidence score of 92%.

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