The $135 Power Station That’s Also a Camping Lantern

Most portable power stations are boring. Not in a dealbreaker way, but in the way that nearly every product in the category looks the same, functions the same, and markets itself the same. A handle on top, a row of ports in front, and a spec sheet heavy enough to make your eyes glaze over. Blavor’s PN-W43 doesn’t completely break that mold, but it makes a deliberate and interesting choice: it’s also a camping lantern. That single design decision changes quite a lot about how you think about this product and what it’s actually for.

Let me set some context. The portable power station market has grown considerably over the last few years, and with that growth has come a predictable flood of look-alike black rectangles. They’re useful, sure. But they’re mostly garage gear, things you pull out during a power outage or scramble to pack the night before a camping trip. The PN-W43 is still that thing, but by integrating a 4W LED lantern into the top of the unit, Blavor built a device that’s immediately, instinctively useful the moment you take it out of its bag.

Designer: Blavor

The lantern isn’t decorative. It’s a functional camping light designed for the kinds of situations power stations are already made for: storms, blackouts, nights under canvas, late nights at a tailgate. It comes with a lanyard, which is a small, practical touch that suggests someone at Blavor thought about actual field use rather than just filling out a product page. Whether you’re hanging it from a tent hook or placing it on a picnic table, the light functions as standalone gear on top of being part of a 64,000mAh power station.

Those specs are genuinely solid for a device this compact. The PN-W43 packs 236.8Wh of capacity into a footprint of roughly 4.72 inches square and just under 8 inches tall. It weighs 4.5 pounds, which you’ll feel on a long hike but is entirely manageable for car camping, van life, or tucking into your trunk for emergencies. The two USB-C ports support bidirectional 100W fast charging, meaning you can charge the station itself at 100W in and push 100W out to a laptop at the same time. That kind of two-way, high-speed transfer still isn’t universal across this category, and it matters more than it might initially sound because it means you’re genuinely flexible with how and when you use the device.

On top of that, there’s 15W wireless charging, two USB-A quick charge outputs, and compatibility with solar panels up to 100W for off-grid recharging. Five total charging pathways in a device barely bigger than a tall water bottle, and a digital display to keep you updated on battery status so you’re not left guessing at the worst possible moment.

The design language is worth a mention. The PN-W43 comes in orange, and I think that’s the right call. Too much gear in this space defaults to a tactical, all-black aesthetic that reads as serious but ends up feeling generic. The orange makes the PN-W43 look like a considered product rather than a commodity. It’s something you’d want to see on a shelf or a workbench. That sounds superficial, but objects you actually like looking at are objects you actually remember to use and maintain.

Is it perfect? Not quite. At 236.8Wh, it sits comfortably in the mid-range of portable power. It’ll keep your phones, laptops, and essential gear running through a rough couple of days, but it isn’t designed to power an entire household during an extended outage. Know what you’re buying and you’ll be more than satisfied. Expect it to be something it’s not, and you’ll be disappointed by a product that otherwise gets a lot of things right.

What the PN-W43 ultimately represents is a power station that thought a little harder about the people who actually use it. The lantern is the proof of that thinking. It’s not a gimmick. It’s the reason this product has a personality, and in a market full of near-identical options, that counts for more than it might seem.