If you’re tired of playing cable-Tetris every morning — hunting for the right HDMI cable, the odd USB stick, the ethernet adapter that lives in a drawer — Ugreen has a one-cable cheat code right now. Its Revodok Max 208, an 8-in-1 Thunderbolt 4 dock, is on sale for $169.98 (that’s about $80 off), at both Amazon and Ugreen’s store. If you’ve been dreaming of plugging one thing into your laptop and having everything come to life, this is the kind of gadget that makes that daydream real.
The Revodok Max 208 is a compact aluminum block with a straightforward mission: turn one Thunderbolt 4 port on your laptop into a proper workstation. On paper, it offers:
- One upstream Thunderbolt 4 port that supplies 85W to your laptop (so yes, it’ll charge most modern laptops while connected).
- Three downstream Thunderbolt 4 ports for accessories or displays (40Gbps each).
- Three USB-A ports on the front (handy if you still own legacy dongles or thumb drives).
- A gigabit Ethernet jack on the back.

That combination makes it useful for a wide range of desks: home office folks who want wired internet + external monitor(s); photographers who need fast TB4 transfers; or anyone who hates unplugging and replugging every time they leave their desk. The $169.98 price tag stacks up well against the many Thunderbolt docking options that hover in the $170–$250 range during sales.
Docking stations and displays are where Thunderbolt marketing gets fussy. Ugreen advertises that the Revodok Max 208 can run two 4K@60Hz displays or a single 8K (with the right host machine). But the real-world limits depend on the laptop’s chipset:
- Many Intel and higher-end Apple M-series (Pro/Max/Ultra) Macs can drive dual 4K displays through a TB4 dock.
- Basic M-chip MacBooks (the non-Pro/Max M1/M2/M3 models) historically limit external displays, so some MacBooks will only support one 4K output through a hub like this. Ugreen even keeps a compatibility chart on the product page so buyers can check specific models. Windows laptops with Thunderbolt 3/4 or USB-C 4 are more likely to support a single 8K display via the dock.
Put simply: the dock will happily output to multiple monitors, but whether you get two 4K screens or an 8K TV depends on your laptop — double-check the compatibility chart before assuming miracles.
Some modern laptops ship with multiple ports, but there’s a quality-of-life argument here that isn’t about sheer capacity: it’s about convenience. One cable that feeds power, Ethernet and multiple displays is a simple, stress-free ritual. For Mac users in particular — whose laptops have not included USB-A ports for years now — having three front-facing USB-A ports on a dock means you don’t need an extra dongle for every legacy gadget. The Revodok Max 208 essentially turns a messy nest of cables into a single action: plug in, type, go.
There are rival docks from Plugable, Kensington and StarTech that sit in roughly the same price band, and sale events (Prime Day, seasonal sales) often push those prices lower. At its sale price here, the Revodok Max 208 looks competitive — especially if you value the mix of TB4 ports plus accessible USB-A ports. If you want full 100W laptop charging or enterprise features (docking keys, specific VESA mounts, etc.), you’ll want to compare spec sheets — but for a general, power-friendly 85W hub, the Revodok is a sensible pick.
Who should jump on this
Buy it if:
- You want a tidy single-cable desk setup and your laptop has Thunderbolt 3/4 or USB-C 4.
- You need front-facing USB-A ports for older accessories.
- You want to add wired Ethernet and multiple monitors without buying separate adapters.
Hold off if:
- Your MacBook is a basic M-chip model and you need dual external 4K displays (check Ugreen’s compatibility chart first).
Disclaimer: Prices and promotions mentioned in this article are accurate at the time of writing and are subject to change based on the retailers’ discretion. Please verify the current offer before making a purchase.
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