Japan just got new freestanding monitor stands that ditch cockpit lock-in and let sim racers move screens and seats without starting a metal cage argument.
What just showed up in Japan
What just showed up in Japan
- Basically, Milestone added two Next Level Racing monitor stands to its Japanese listings.
- Both are freestanding, meaning zero dependency on a cockpit frame.
- Sales kick off January 24, 2026, right after a January 23 announcement.
- Screens go where they should first.
- Cockpit position gets adjusted after, not the other way around.
- Ergonomics stop fighting mounting hardware for dominance.
- The Round Tube Freestanding Triple Monitor Stand NLR-R011 is the heavy hitter.
- It handles up to three 43-inch displays.
- The frame uses 50 mm carbon-steel round tubing with a dual crossbar layout.
- Height, tilt, angle, and level adjustments are all built in.
- That matters when triple screens refuse to line up like civilized adults.
- Uneven horizons and mismatched edges are exactly what this targets.
- VESA support runs from 75×75 all the way to 800×400.
- The center display is rated up to 50 kg.
- Each side screen is rated up to 30 kg.
- The stand itself weighs 20.8 kg, with published footprint limits for planning.
- The Round Tube Freestanding Single Monitor Stand NLR-R010 keeps the same tube design.
- It supports displays up to 65 inches.
- Maximum display load is listed at 50 kg.
- The footprint lands at 108 cm by 95.6 cm.
- Height adjusts from 98 cm to 141 cm.
- Product weight comes in at 12.7 kg.
- That range works for low GT seating and upright driving or flight setups.
- The NLR-R011 triple stand lists at about $388.12.
- The NLR-R010 single stand costs around $210.87.
- Prices reflect Japanese direct-sales listings.
- A freestanding stand locks the screen geometry in place.
- Seats, wheels, and pedals can move freely without wrecking alignment.
- Once ergonomics tuning starts, that flexibility matters more than headline screen size limits.