Okay, buckle up, creatives โ because this โportable TV on wheelsโ is weird in all the right ways. Let me sell you on why this rolling 32-inch touchscreen smart display might become your new museโs best friend (or nemesis, depending on how demanding your ego gets). First, the specs you need to know (so you donโt feel cheated later):
What the heck is this thing?
This is basically a 32-inch portable smart TV / touch-monitor on a pole with wheels. The version Iโm referencing is powered by a Qualcomm (octa-core) chip, runs Android 13, has 8 GB RAM + 128 GB storage, a built-in battery (8โ10 hours in some listings) so you donโt always need a wall socket, and a rotating / tilting / height-adjustable screen. Amazon+3Amazon+3Amazon+3
It supports touchscreen input (10-point, meaning fingers happen), casting / mirroring / HDMI connections, wheel mobility, and some swivel action so you can twist it around like a possessed TV. Amazon+2Amazon+2
In short: it’s a big rolling Android tablet meets television meets absurd prop.
(Also: the KTC 32สบ 4K Touchscreen Portable Monitor is an example from the same โgenreโ โ 32-inch, swivel, Android, 4K โ and is worth eyeballing for comparison.)

Why creatives (you, yes you) might absolutely love this โ or at least consider it with suspicious fascination
1. Your workspace just went nomadic
Youโre tired of sitting in the same chair, staring at the same dual monitors. With this, you can wheel your screen to the kitchen while making coffee, then roll it into your backyard for โfresh air inspiration,โ then combine it with your whiteboard wall to whip up a sudden storyboard session. The mobility is its superpower.
Imagine: you sketch an idea on your iPad, cast it to the big screen, then wheel the display over to your collaborator in the next room to drop feedback. No more shouting โhey โ come look!โ across the hall.
2. Mockups + presentations = power move
Say youโre pitching to a client or showing your portfolio. You can roll in like โBehold, my creative magnum opus,โ swivel the screen for dramatic effect, and let them tap / zoom / scroll. The touchscreen + Android means you can run your own presentation app, show prototypes live, even demo UX flows straight from your phone.
Also: for video editors, animators, UI/UX folks โ seeing your work at actual size (or close) while pivoting around it can change your perspective (literally).
3. Creative playground meets media hub
Youโre not just locked into your design tools. This thing can stream YouTube, Netflix, TikTok, etc. Want to pull up reference videos mid-project without squishing your workflow? Itโs there. Amazon+2Amazon+2
Wanna have ambient visuals (abstract looping motion graphics) behind your working space to get in the zone? Roll that baby behind you and let it set mood lighting (if colors are adjustable).
4. Better video calls, better energy, better excuses
Need to do a video call? Youโve got a camera (some versions have 4K or multi-megapixel cameras) built in. The rolling stand lets you adjust the height to exactly where you donโt feel like a disembodied forehead on Zoom. Amazon+2Amazon+2
Plus: โSorry, I wasnโt in the frame โ I wheeled the monitor too farโ is a better excuse than โmy laptopโs webcam is garbage.โ
5. Flexibility in weird creative setups
Some examples:
- A performance artist could roll this onto the stage during a show, as live visuals / projection / reactive display.
- A photographer could use it backstage to show live captures to a client while shooting (so they critique in real time).
- A studio might use it as a mobile mood board: pin color palettes, video references, or inspirational boards that float around the space.
- A speed-designer or someone doing rapid ideation could set it flat, vertical, tilt it โ whatever orientation matches their craft โ then wheel it closer to collaborators for instant feedback.

The snarky โyeah butโ & things to watch out for
Because yes, everything has trade-offs (even brilliance wrapped in wheels):
- Battery life is quoted at 8โ10 hours in some listings, but โbuilt in battery lasts up to 6 hoursโ is also mentioned in some specs. Amazon So donโt plan to mid-project unplugged unless you want drama.
- At 32 inches and with wheels + stand + hardware, the total weight is nontrivial. It wonโt be as nimble as a laptop or a tab sled.
- Brightness, viewing angles, color calibration โ for serious design/photo work youโll need to check whether the display is up to snuff. These are smart TVs first; color-perfect monitors are a different beast.
- Android + app ecosystem might limit you compared to native creative desktop software. If your workflow is Photoshop, Figma, Blender, etc., youโll still depend on your main rig. This device is auxiliary, not primary in many advanced workflows.
- Durability; wheels, joints, swivel mechanisms โ mechanical parts tend to age. Donโt expect it to survive a warehouse drop test.
My Final verdict (with a wink)
If I were you, Iโd buy this thing as a creativeโs โplaything yes, essential maybeโ. Itโs one of those love-it or request-a-return hybrid gadgets. But the quirky potential is enormous. It turns your workspace into a theater, your presentations into interactive performances, and your inspiration into something you can roll around.
If you let your ego believe itโs your companion, it might even forgive your editing mistakes.




