
Phrozen Mighty Revo MAX brings 14-inch 16K LCD to large-format resin printing
Hardware
Originally reported by 3Druck
Phrozen, the Taiwan-based resin 3D printing specialist, has previewed its upcoming Mighty Revo MAX, a large-format MSLA printer built around a 14-inch 16K LCD panel. The system targets users needing oversized single-piece prints — figures, cosplay armor, or functional prototypes — without sacrificing surface detail. Key specs include a 2,000 ml resin vat for extended unattended runs, dual temperature control for handling viscous or cool-environment resins, a tool-less quick-change film system rated at three-minute swaps, and a leak-proof base to contain spills. A 1080p camera with AI anomaly detection rounds out the feature set. Phrozen has not yet disclosed build volume, exposure times, material compatibility, pricing, or launch date.
This launch lands in a segment where resin printing has historically traded build area for resolution. The Mighty Revo MAX attempts to close that gap with a 16K mask across a 14-inch panel — a pixel density that, if realized, would let users print large helmet halves or prop weapons in one go rather than gluing smaller sections. The dual heating and large vat address two practical pain points for hobbyists and small studios: failed prints from cold resin and mid-print refill interruptions. Phrozen competes here against Elegoo’s Saturn and Jupiter series, Anycubic’s Photon Mono M5s Pro, and Peopoly’s Forge, all of which have pushed into larger formats with high-resolution LCDs. The Mighty Revo MAX’s real differentiator will be whether its 16K resolution on a 14-inch panel delivers visibly better detail than the 12K or 14K alternatives already shipping, and whether the AI camera reduces the failure rate meaningfully for overnight runs.
For Phrozen, the Mighty Revo MAX is a spec-lead play in a mature consumer resin market where margins are thin and competition is fierce. The company needs to deliver on the 16K resolution claims with consistent print quality across the full build area, and price the system competitively against the $400–$800 large-format resin printers already on shelves. Buyers should wait for independent reviews of layer quality and AI reliability before committing — the specs are promising, but execution in a heated vat with a 2,000 ml resin load is harder than the marketing suggests.
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