Rogbid has taken the humble portable fan and given it a small dose of overengineering. The new Winggo portable fan costs $39.99, pairs a 13,000 RPM motor with a semiconductor cooling pad, and claims up to 10 hours of battery life, which is a lot more ambitious than the average clip-on breeze machine.
The pitch is simple: don’t just move hot air around, cool the skin directly. That puts Winggo in the same broad category as the handheld cooling gadgets that have been creeping into the accessory market, where battery-powered convenience is no longer enough on its own. Rogbid is betting that a metal cold plate and a few extra tricks will make the difference between ”nice to have” and ”actually useful”.
Winggo hardware and cooling system
The main selling point is the semiconductor cooling pad, which drops in temperature in a few seconds. Rogbid says users can press it against the neck or wrists for direct cooling, while the fan itself pushes air at up to 11 meters per second. That combination is smarter than a plain fan, because air movement alone tends to lose the fight once the heat gets serious.
It also helps that the Winggo is built from aluminum alloy rather than the usual plastic. That should make it feel more premium in hand and a little less fragile in a bag, which is handy for a device that is clearly meant to be carried everywhere and occasionally abused by gravity.
100 speed levels and a 180-degree hinge
Rogbid has gone a bit wild with controls. Instead of the usual low, medium, and high buttons, the Winggo offers stepless adjustment across 100 speed levels, and a small LED display shows both the current setting and remaining battery percentage. That sounds fussy until you remember how often budget fans jump straight from whisper to wind tunnel.
The 180-degree adjustable hinge gives it more flexibility than a standard handheld model. It can sit on a desk, be used in the hand, or hang around the neck with the included lanyard, while a dual-layer honeycomb mesh helps keep hair away from the blades when worn that way. This is the sort of practical detail cheaper rivals often skip, usually until someone’s ponytail teaches them a lesson.
Battery life, lighting, and color options
Power comes from a 3,000mAh battery charged over USB-C, and Rogbid says the fan can last up to 10 hours on one charge. That figure is almost certainly tied to the lowest speed, but even so, it is enough for commuting, outdoor events, or a long day of pretending summer is under control.
There is also an LED light with three brightness settings and a flashing SOS mode, which pushes the Winggo a little closer to campsite gadget territory. The fan is available now in Space Gray, Champagne Gold, and Sakura Pink, and Rogbid is clearly aiming at shoppers who want something more polished than a generic plastic fan without spending serious money.
At $39.99, the Winggo portable fan sits in a crowded middle ground: cheap enough to impulse-buy, but priced high enough that it has to justify itself with features. The semiconductor cooling plate gives it a real hook, and if Rogbid can keep the performance decent instead of gimmicky, this could be one of the few portable fans that does more than just circulate regret.

