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Secretlab's TITAN Evo Mandalorian Edition Wraps the Same Premium Chair in Beskar Chrome for $664

Secretlab's Star Wars Day 2026 collaboration adds a chrome-leatherette TITAN Evo with Mudhorn signet, Mando'a script, and Beskar-armor styling. Same chair platform underneath, $200 premium for the licensed work.

Secretlab's TITAN Evo Mandalorian Edition Wraps the Same Premium Chair in Beskar Chrome for $664

What it is

The Secretlab TITAN Evo Mandalorian Edition is a Star Wars collaboration skin on the company's flagship gaming chair, released on Star Wars Day 2026 and timed to the May 22 theatrical premiere of The Mandalorian and Grogu. Prices start at $664 in the US and Canada, rising with size and accessory selections. Underneath the licensed treatment, this is the same TITAN Evo platform Secretlab has shipped for four years.

What's interesting

The detail work is the visible upgrade. Tom's Hardware describes a chrome leatherette finish that mirrors Din Djarin's Beskar armor, with the Mudhorn signet embossed into the headrest and "This is the Way" embossed in Mando'a along the seat base. Helmet visor outline, chestplate, and vambrace shapes appear as quiet visual references rather than loud screen-prints. PCGamesN's Edward Chester flags the T-shaped visor on the backrest and notes this edition is leatherette-only with no fabric option.

The hardware platform is well-traveled territory. Tom's Hardware confirms the standard TITAN Evo build kit: cold-cure foam seating that holds its shape over years of use, the four-way L-Adapt lumbar with side-to-side adjustment, 4D armrests, plus a magnetic head pillow built around cooling-gel memory foam. Sizing covers Regular for users between 5'7" and 6'2" up to 220 pounds, and XL for users up to 6'9" and 395 pounds. PCGamesN's Edward Chester writes that the chair "delivers great comfort and features" and is "still my favorite years on from having first tested it," a trust signal earned over multiple test cycles rather than a launch-day quote.

This is not Secretlab's first Star Wars edition. PCGamesN notes existing Empire and Stormtrooper TITAN Evo skins along with Star Wars TITAN chair covers and a desk mat for the Magnus Pro desk. The Mandalorian Edition slots into that lineage. For buyers comparing across the Secretlab Star Wars range, the Mandalorian's chrome finish is the most visually distinctive of the set so far.

What's missing or unverified

The premium for the licensed treatment is the honest decision point. The base TITAN Evo 2022 Regular runs well below $664 at most configurations, which means the Mandalorian Edition asks roughly $200 more for cosmetic detailing. That is fine if the licensed look is what you want, and Gamerant's reviewer calls the design "absolutely your sign to go for it" if you are already in market. It is not fine if you were planning a base TITAN Evo purchase and got pushed into the licensed SKU on impulse.

Long-term durability of the chrome leatherette finish is unverified at launch. Standard TITAN Evo PU leather has multi-year wear data from Secretlab's own program and from reviewer testing; the chrome treatment is new. Buyers paying the Mandalorian premium should keep proof of purchase through Secretlab's warranty window in case the chrome treatment ages differently than the base finish.

Ergonomic-chair advocates typically push first-time gaming-chair shoppers toward premium office chairs from Herman Miller or Steelcase rather than gaming silhouettes, and the TITAN Evo is the only mainstream gaming-branded model that holds its own in that comparison. Buyers torn between a Mandalorian Edition and a Herman Miller Aeron should weigh whether the licensed aesthetic is worth giving up the deeper ergonomic engineering of the office-chair option.

Who it's for

Buy the Mandalorian Edition if you were already evaluating a Secretlab TITAN Evo, you want a Star Wars-themed seat that reads as restrained rather than costume, and the roughly $200 premium over the base chair feels appropriate for the licensed work. The Mandalorian and Grogu fans who spend eight or more hours a day in their chair are the specific fit. Pass if you only want the chair function (the base TITAN Evo at lower price covers it), or if you sit in the office-chair camp that prefers Herman Miller Aeron or Steelcase Leap ergonomics over a gaming silhouette.

Verdict

74/100. The same well-regarded TITAN Evo chair underneath, with the most visually striking Star Wars licensing Secretlab has produced so far. Buy it if the Mandalorian aesthetic is what you actually want; step down to the base TITAN Evo if it is the chair you wanted and the Beskar finish was a coincidence.

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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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