Fighter Fx 72 -
To understand the hype, you have to put the FX 72 against its closest rivals: the Anker Prime 20K (65W) and the Shargeek Storm 2 (100W).
| Criterion | Fighter FX 72 | Anker Prime 20K | Shargeek Storm 2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Max Output | 72W | 65W | 100W | | Weight | 380g | 490g | 588g | | Durability | IP54 / Aluminum | No rating / Plastic | No rating / Transparent plastic | | Price Point | $79-$89 | $99-$119 | $139-$169 | | Unique Feature | Adjustable voltage (5-25V) | Smart App integration | Transparent design | fighter fx 72
The verdict: The Anker has a better app, and the Shargeek has more raw power, but the Fighter FX 72 wins on power-to-weight ratio and ruggedness. If you drop the Anker, you cry. If you drop the FX 72, you worry about the floor. To understand the hype, you have to put
| Feature | Specification | | :--- | :--- | | Total Output | 72W Max | | Ports | 2x USB-C (PD 3.1), 1x USB-A (QC 4.0) | | Capacity | 20,000 mAh (Lithium-Polymer) | | Input | 65W Max (2-hour recharge) | | Display | 1.14" IPS Color LCD (Voltage/Cycles/Temp) | | Safety | Over-voltage, over-current, short-circuit, temperature protection | | Weight | 380 grams (13.4 oz) | If you drop the FX 72, you worry about the floor
The "Fighter" designation also means the cells are rated for extreme temperatures. Standard power banks fail in freezing cold or scorching heat; the FX 72 operates between -20°C to 60°C (-4°F to 140°F), making it a favorite for van-lifers and field technicians.
(If your actual FX-72 differs, swap in the precise specs here.)
If "Fighter FX 72" is interpreted as the F-15 Prototype (YF-15A) which flew in 1972: