Verdict
Top Score · #1 of 5Reviewed by Mike Hunter·May 25, 2026

Razer Iskur V2 X

Averaged from 3 derived from review text
The verdict

The Razer Iskur V2 X brings Razer's ergonomic pedigree to the $300 ceiling by stripping the flagship Iskur V2 down to its essentials. TechRadar called it 'a great value gaming chair that delivers all of the essentials at a very fair price,' and Tom's Hardware noted it costs 'less than half the price of its overachieving sibling.' Reviewers single out the built-in lumbar arch, breathable fabric, and a metal base that outclasses the plastic found on budget chairs. The trade-offs are simple 2D armrests and no headrest pillow.

Razer Iskur V2 X

Full review

Razer's Ergonomics at a Lower Price

The Razer Iskur V2 X is what happens when a premium gaming-chair maker decides to compete on value. It takes the design language of the much pricier Iskur V2 and pares it back to the parts that matter most, landing right at the $300 ceiling. TechRadar tested it for over a month and called it 'a great value gaming chair that delivers all of the essentials at a very fair price,' while Tom's Hardware framed the appeal in blunt economic terms, noting it 'can be had for less than half the price of its overachieving sibling.' Windows Central was even warmer, calling it 'an excellent gaming chair' it would 'easily recommend to any gamer who wants to sit comfortably for hours on end.' For a brand usually associated with steep prices, the V2 X is a genuine surprise.

Comfort and Lumbar Support

The standout feature is the built-in lumbar arch. Rather than a removable pillow that slides around or falls behind you, Razer molds the lumbar curve directly into the backrest, so the support is always where it should be. Reviewers consistently praised the plush fabric seating surface as comfortable over extended sessions, and noted it breathes better than the synthetic leather common on cheaper chairs, an important detail for marathon play in a warm room. The widened seat base accommodates a range of body types, and the high-density foam cushions hold their shape rather than flattening out, which is where many budget chairs disappoint after a few months.

Build Quality and Design

Where the V2 X most clearly outclasses its price bracket is the base. Reviewers highlighted its hard-wearing metal base as feeling 'substantially more durable than the usual plastic ones found on cheaper models,' the kind of structural confidence that separates a chair you keep for years from one that develops a wobble. The recline adjusts from a working 90 degrees back to a lounge-friendly 152 degrees, and the overall construction uses robust materials throughout. The styling is restrained for a gaming chair, leaning on clean fabric and subtle Razer branding rather than aggressive racing bolsters, which makes it easier to live with in a shared room.

Where It Falls Short

Hitting $300 meant cuts, and Razer made them in predictable places. The armrests are only 2D, adjusting up, down, and along one axis, where the Corsair T3 Rush and E-Win Knight Series offer full 4D movement. There is no memory-foam headrest pillow, a feature you would get on the step-up Iskur V2, so neck support depends on the backrest shape alone. The lumbar arch, while excellent, is fixed rather than adjustable, so it can't be tuned to an unusual back profile. And unlike the RESPAWN 110 Pro, there is no footrest, so it can't fully convert into a recliner. These are reasonable omissions at the price, but they define who the chair is and isn't for.

Value at This Price

At $299.99 the Iskur V2 X sits at the very top of this category's budget, but reviewers argue it earns the ceiling. The case rests on two things competitors at the price skimp on: a metal base instead of plastic, and breathable fabric instead of cheap synthetic leather. Tom's Hardware's observation that it costs 'less than half the price of its overachieving sibling' reframes the value, you are getting most of the flagship Iskur V2 experience for a fraction of the cost, with the cuts confined to armrests and the headrest pillow. TechRadar's month of testing concluded it delivers 'all of the essentials at a very fair price,' and that is the crux: it spends its budget on the parts that affect comfort and longevity rather than on flashy adjustment gimmicks, which is why it lands among the most-recommended chairs at the $300 line.

Who It's Best For

The Iskur V2 X is the pick for a buyer who prioritizes lower-back support, breathable comfort, and a durable build over adjustment knobs and gadgets. It suits gamers and remote workers who sit upright for long stretches and want lumbar support that simply works without fiddling. Those who need fine armrest control should choose the 4D-equipped Corsair T3 Rush or E-Win Knight Series; anyone who wants to recline nearly flat with a footrest will prefer the RESPAWN 110 Pro; and shoppers trying to spend as little as possible while still getting a name-brand chair should look at the cheaper Corsair TC100.

Strengths

  • +Built-in lumbar arch baked into the backrest, no removable pillow to slip out of place
  • +Breathable plush fabric surface that stays cooler than synthetic leather over long sessions
  • +Hard-wearing metal base that feels far more durable than the plastic bases on cheaper chairs
  • +Widened seat base comfortably fits a range of body types
  • +Adjustable 152 degree recline that leans back far enough for a break or a nap

Watch-outs

  • Only 2D armrests, dropping the 4D adjustment found on the Corsair T3 Rush and E-Win Knight
  • No memory-foam headrest pillow, unlike the step-up Iskur V2
  • Fixed lumbar arch can't be dialed in like an adjustable lumbar system
  • No footrest, so it can't lounge as flat as the RESPAWN 110 Pro

How it compares

The Razer Iskur V2 X is the comfort-and-build pick of the group, with a built-in lumbar arch and a metal base that feel a class above the Corsair TC100 and E-Win Knight Series. It gives up the 4D armrests of the Corsair T3 Rush and E-Win Knight for simpler 2D arms, and it lacks the extendable footrest of the RESPAWN 110 Pro, leaning on seat comfort and lumbar support rather than lounging features.

Who this is for

At a glance: Gamers who want strong built-in lumbar support and breathable fabric right at the $300 ceiling.

Why you’d buy the Razer Iskur V2 X

  • Built-in lumbar arch baked into the backrest, no removable pillow to slip out of place.
  • Breathable plush fabric surface that stays cooler than synthetic leather over long sessions.
  • Hard-wearing metal base that feels far more durable than the plastic bases on cheaper chairs.

Why you’d skip it

  • Only 2D armrests, dropping the 4D adjustment found on the Corsair T3 Rush and E-Win Knight.
  • No memory-foam headrest pillow, unlike the step-up Iskur V2.
  • Fixed lumbar arch can't be dialed in like an adjustable lumbar system.

Rating sources

Our 4.3 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Razer Iskur V2 X worth buying?
The Razer Iskur V2 X brings Razer's ergonomic pedigree to the $300 ceiling by stripping the flagship Iskur V2 down to its essentials. TechRadar called it 'a great value gaming chair that delivers all of the essentials at a very fair price,' and Tom's Hardware noted it costs 'less than half the price of its overachieving sibling.' Reviewers single out the built-in lumbar arch, breathable fabric, and a metal base that outclasses the plastic found on budget chairs. The trade-offs are simple 2D armrests and no headrest pillow.
What is the Razer Iskur V2 X's biggest strength?
Built-in lumbar arch baked into the backrest, no removable pillow to slip out of place
What is the main drawback of the Razer Iskur V2 X?
Only 2D armrests, dropping the 4D adjustment found on the Corsair T3 Rush and E-Win Knight
What sources back the 4.3/5 rating?
Our 4.3/5 rating is the average of scores from 3 independent gaming chairs under $300 reviews — techradar, tomshardware, and windowscentral. Click any source on the product page to read the original review.

How it compares

See all 5
E-Win Knight Series
#2

E-Win Knight Series

The E-Win Knight Series stands out for its high 330 lb weight capacity and firm support pillows, giving larger users more room than the Corsair TC100 or Razer Iskur V2 X. It offers 4D armrests like the Corsair T3 Rush but uses firmer PU-leather padding, and unlike the RESPAWN 110 Pro it has no footrest, prioritizing upright ergonomic support over reclining-lounge versatility.

RESPAWN 110 Pro Gaming Chair
#3

RESPAWN 110 Pro Gaming Chair

The RESPAWN 110 Pro is the only chair here with a built-in extendable footrest and a near-flat 155 degree recline, features the Corsair T3 Rush, E-Win Knight Series, Razer Iskur V2 X, and Corsair TC100 all lack. It trades the 4D armrests of the Corsair T3 Rush and the dedicated lumbar support of the Razer Iskur V2 X for lounging versatility, and its racing-style build is less office-oriented than the E-Win Knight or the budget Corsair TC100.

Corsair TC100 Relaxed
#4

Corsair TC100 Relaxed

The Corsair TC100 Relaxed is the value play of the group, delivering a wide, well-cushioned seat for less than the Razer Iskur V2 X or Corsair T3 Rush. It shares the 2D armrests of the Razer Iskur V2 X rather than the 4D arms of the T3 Rush and E-Win Knight Series, and like those it has no footrest, so the RESPAWN 110 Pro still wins for full reclining. It leans on included pillows where the Razer Iskur V2 X has a built-in lumbar arch.

Corsair T3 Rush Fabric
#5

Corsair T3 Rush Fabric

The Corsair T3 Rush is the adjustability leader of this group, with true 4D armrests that the RESPAWN 110 Pro, E-Win Knight Series, Razer Iskur V2 X, and Corsair TC100 cannot match. Its breathable fabric runs cooler than synthetic-leather rivals, but it lacks the footrest of the RESPAWN 110 Pro and the built-in lumbar arch of the Razer Iskur V2 X, and it costs more than its budget Corsair TC100 sibling.

Razer Iskur V2 X
4.3/5· $239.99
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