My order from BTOD just arrived with my refurbished Leap v2. I'm sitting in it and initially like it. My biggest complaint after my initial setting is the seating area isn't long enough. Like Greg stated the tailbone area is a bit weak. I'm 6' 2" and just over 200 lbs., and finding the cushion bounce is good in the seat but the size of the seat length is too short. Before adjusting my seat forward to get the closest distance between the seat's edge to the back of my knees I was feeling good in my tail bone area (but of course my back and upper legs weren't). By sliding my seat forward all the way, my tailbone cushion area is weak. I'm only 6'2" and yet the Leap's seat is at its end on adjustments but the back of my knees are supposed to be 2" to 3" at the most from the edge of the front of the seat. The back of my knees is 4" from the edge of the seat's cushion (no wonder why that area of my legs are always aching). This is the big fail in the Leap for anyone my height or taller in my opinion. Where's the chair for taller people? Oh, right they didn't make it. Why hasn't Steelcase made a chair to fit taller people? Or why doesn't Steelcase offer a seat that's at least one inch longer for tall people? People are getting taller. Where's your video for taller people to watch on taller people's chair offerings? Thanks and overall you made a great video with this one Greg.
I'm in the same boat. I'm 6'4" 205 lbs and I originally had the seat adjusted all the way out but i was essentially sitting on the back base of the chair where there was no cushioning. I've since then brought the seat in a bit to compensate. I can fit my whole hand between the seat and the back of my knee but at least I have a bit of cushion. Definitely less than ideal since I didn't get the Fern becuase it was said to have a large gap in the back of the seat for tall people. I just wish manufacturers could offer a slightly deeper seat, even as an add on, to account for taller people .
Went to local distributor and tried both chairs. I'm 5'10 and 182lbs and normal build. My sense and test showed that the Gesture was just a more solid and comfortable option. I like it that with the Gesture, there's a little back movement on full up tilt (6.40). It's feels more natural as it seems to me that your body is always moving and this small movement helps. The tilt function, when the personal tension is adjusted is a joy. The Lumbar option gives enough support without overkill. The seat and back are very supportive and comfortable. I opted and purchased the Gesture. Received today and very happy . The armrest movement is beyond brilliant . Gesture wins !!
I'm very tall and heavy but I feel I liked the leap more. I only got to sit I'm them for a short period of time today. I did like both a lot, but was leaning towards the leap in store. Going to go back again and make my decision when I'm ready to buy
I own several quality chairs including the original Leap, Leap V2, Gesture, Amia and Embody Gaming. The Gesture is my favorite. The Embody is great but takes a long time to get used to. And for my 5’8” body, my shoulder blades feel restricted by the curved top of the back of the Embody. The Gesture just feels very comfortable. I’m ready to toss/donate my original Leap.
I noticed the tailbone issues on the Gesture as well, which was really disheartening for a while. The Gesture is the first high class chair I ever bought, so I was a little disappointed. But after a while, I noticed it's really dependent on how I sit in it. I liked to slouch a lot in other chairs, and the Gesture immediately punishes that behaviour. But as mentioned in the video, it's because the Gesture wants you to sit in a more proper position and is very comfortable when you do. Whenever I start slouching and it starts to hurt my tailbone, I am reminded to get in a more upright position - with any other chair, I'd start slouching again in less than five minutes, but with the Gesture, it's more like five hours. Plus, with the way it tilts and its adjustability, I barely feel the need to "plank" in the chair anymore. It definitely requires some adjustment to the seating experience, but it's really rewarding for that.
I'm not 100% sure, but I think this also applies to the leap v2 chair. Super comfortable if it's setup properly and you're sitting in it properly. As soon as I slouch, tailbone area gets stiff and it start to get painful.
@@btodtv Btw you guys are the real MVPs in this new age of wfh! Your channel convinced me to finally purchase a fully refurbished leap v2 and I couldn't be happier! It's incredible how sitting on this chair feels like it's repairing my chronic back pain / arthritis that started 13 years ago from using a painful-to-sit on chair with zero back support that was given to me for free as a bachelor. What a hell of a ride it has been and what a huge difference an ergonomic chair makes to your everyday wellbeing. Ofc having a budget now helps also.. but BTODtv, you're doing god's work! Thank you so much for what you do
My major issue as a 5’6” person is that these headrests are too high just like all office chair headrests. If you’re not 5’8” or taller the headrest shoves your head forward and ruins your posture. I would love to get a chair with head support but I can’t find one short enough
I tried out both of them and just by comfort, Leap wins it for me.. If Steelcase could add the Gesture's arms to the Leap that would be an awesome chair.. I really like the Gesture's arms, what a great idea to make them very adjustable.
@@btodtv ... I have a Leap in my office and never tried a Gesture. What is the difference between the armrest adjustment options from the end-result point of view. I understand that the the movement in the Gesture can be more natural, but at the end of the day both adjust vertical, wide, depth and pivot with similar range. Don't they?
I have been sitting in a leap v2 for about 13yrs for work, both with and without the headrest. I also have had one at home (without the headrest) for about 7yrs. I am very comfortable in this chair. I like the one without the headrest for work and would have liked one for home but it costs too much. I bought the chair for around $600 in the configuration I wanted back then from an overstocked website, now they are ~$400, to get one with the headrest I cannot find one under $1200. The chair has held up fairly well. I spec'ed one with "leather", the seat portion has been flaking off for years, the arms did too. I replaced the arm pads cheaper ones from Amazon for `$20-$40 (not as soft and not pleather), Steelcase wanted $200. Given, at home, I basically live in front of my pc without shoes and my feet up on the seat a lot. I did find a place that will send out a refurbished seat portion for about $275 when you send back your old one, I have not done it yet. I have sat in the gesture at work in different work centers on and off, I did not like it. I did like the headrest and the arms, hated the seat. The seat always felt like it was making me slide off the front giving me a wedgie over time, this could be a lack of adjusting the seat properly but it was not for lack of trying. For context I am a male and have been between 150-165lbs over the years and probably don't have the best posture.
I have tried both over the past 2 weeks. I like the lumbar adjustment options on the leap but it's very aggressive and forces you to sit slightly reclined to be comfortable. I found the seat to be quite firm. I wasn't a huge fan of the armrests at first but they have grown on me. I had quite a bit of tailbone pain from the leap after a few days. I thought it might disappear over time but couldn't help but think the Gesture might be a better option. Swapped it over today and I do like how the gesture is less agressive in the lumbar and the seat is a bit softer. I can easily push back and recline if I feel I'm getting too stiff in the chair. This is helpful when I'm upright working and then I just want to push back. It's a shame I can't lock the chair into a position but you can't really do that with the leap either. The lumbar system does feel like it's digging into my back on both chairs. I guess I need to give it a few days. It's a tough one. The leap wins in some areas where the gesture doesn't and vice versa. I'm probably going to recline more throughout the day in the gesture then go back to the tasking position which might be a good thing.
I just got a gesture from Steelcase Japan last week. They have been offering a 30% off for this chair and got out of stock of the leap. So easy to make up my mind to get the gesture, and no regrets
Ordered a Gesture since there's a sale in the EU now making it cheaper than the Leap or Amia. I had the Leap v2 for a couple of months and couldn't get used to it, not sure if it was the crooked back defect it had from factory(replaced once, 2nd one was even more crooked), or I just didn't get along with the aggressive backrest. I think it was both, but crooked backs on a 1000$ chair is not ok, so I returned it. Hopefully the Gesture doesn't come with any factory defects and I can finally enjoy a good ergonomic chair, because I've had horrible luck with both Steelcase and Herman Miller(Sayl, forward tilt broken from factory, cylinder replaced twice, plastic base replaced once, in 2 years).
Hi, thanks for your input. Could you let me know what you think about gesture when it will arrive? Im curious if its better than leap, I also dont like when backrest is not straight.
@@markorimar6245 Hello, so I just had to cancel the order, Steelcase in Europe is having some supply issues with the Gesture and the delivery would have been around march. I need something sooner than that. Guess my bad luck streak did not end :D If it helps, I tried the Gesture in a showroom some time ago. It was a much more "free" chair than the Leap, almost requiring you to find your position, it was only there to assist. The Leap is the opposite, it is a very restrictive chair for both the back and the seat, by any standards, not only Steelcase. Obviously this depends somewhat on your body, but bottom line the Gesture and the Leap are completely opposite chairs in my experience. If you can't try them in person, the Gesture may be a safer buy.
Which one would you recommend if don’t sit in them properly all the time? Sometimes I sit with one leg up and kinda sideways or sit partly slid down the chair.
I have a spinal injury that resulted in neck surgery and I can only sit in a very specific position. I need to heavily slouch as a correct upright position cause my arms to go numb. I need to be able to sit in my chair for up to 14 hours a day, and currently the chair I have won't go low enough to get my feet flat on the floor and accommodate the correct position required. Out of both of the se chairs I need the one that is the most adjustable towards a heavily slouched position, that will allow lumbar support to try and avoid lower back issues. I'm finding it difficult to decide between these two chairs as the reviews are all so varying.
I nearly didn’t buy a gesture because of your review, mainly cause of the concerns of the seat comfort, I’ve come from sitting on a secret labs Titan, and I can confirm that the gesture is far far more comfortable, I was worried about the foam in the middle of seat being hard on the tailbone as you suggest in the video, but it’s honestly just not the case, been sitting in the gesture for 10hours a day and it’s really quite comfortable, I also don’t have other high end chairs to compare it to, nor have I tried many, However as a 6”2’ individual I am very Happy with the gesture with the headrest 👌
The Gesture’s frame isn’t made predominantly of aluminum and the seat isn’t made predominantly of polyester. You are also making a a lot of assumptions that these chairs come from a low end factory with the lowest paid workers in the country. You are just spreading misinformation at this point. -RB
You not knowing the difference between a chair frame being made from aluminum and that simply being an upgrade to the wheel base shows that you should not be commenting on this. -RB
Has anyone had experience with the gesture? The more upright position, less aggressive lumbar support and good headrest look very appealing to me but as someone who does long hours with a mix of writing and coding the stiffer front and weak tailbone region also sound worrying. I'd like to get a gist of if these are common issues or something Greg is particularly sensitive to.
Please review the Steelcase Karman whenever you can get your hands on one. I want to know if it really fixes the problem other mesh chairs have re: uncomfortable frame.
I was fortunate that I was able to try out both chairs before I shelled out over a $1k. I ruled out the Leap2 for two reasons. First, the harsh lumbar support and the second was the gap between the seat and the back. That gap was constantly "pinching" my backside. The only concern is how comfortable the Gesture will be on my tailbone as it was damaged during the birth of my first child. I don't have the chair yet as it was a custom order. I'm hoping all those adjustments will prove helpful towards making the Gesture comfortable for me.
i love the armrest and headrest of the gesture, but i prefer a better padding on the leap, yet you said both have thinner seat-padding. i have issues with tailbone pain on my current chair, so both seem like bad upgrade for me? i look for comfort, support and need to sit long hours, being a bit on the heavier side myself.
i got a leap v2 and it made my tailbone start having intense agony. It was so bad i had to send the chair back its crazy because the chair is so adjustable yet nothing i did helped the pain.
Will you comment on the fact that the warranty was reduced to 5(!) years for EU customers? I was going to pull the trigger on a gesture when I noticed this, now I'm almost completely turned off unless I find a very good price somewhere.
I'd love to see a video looking for the best office chair IF you have cats. No kidding. I had an Ergohuman chair my boss passed over and that mesh was screaming for help every time my cat was on it. It was a claws magnet. He loved kneading it.
@@btodtv I bought a Secretlab Titan which may be the closest thing to hard plastic when you sit on it. The "Softweave" one. At least my cats doesn't tear it apart. That thing it's almost a tank. And, I passed over the Ergochair to my dad to help him with his back problems. Now I have to buy a new one for me to sit on. 😹
A sacrificial chair helps. But it depends on how you train your cat. Mine knows some chairs are not safe to touch and will result in getting chased around the house with a slipper. Don't need to hit the cat, just slap the slipper on something and make noise.
I just sit on a testing embody from a site for a little over a week now also had some tailbone pain the first 2-3days but it went away but slowly I feel like for how I sit and what i do in it (mostly gaming, and then also for straight a lot of hours at a time) the back on the embody feels too hard for me. Because I game and for ove ra decade always tend to slouch after a while no matter what (even on the embody which made the back feel even harder for me) I feel like the leap v2's "slouch function" where the arms and seat not tilt back with the backrest, is exactly how people that game slide down in their chairs and get a crooked back. I did and do the same even in the embody sometimes. And I can imagine with a light slouch in the leap v2, having the arm rest still straight on your desk height, this looks like The perfect chair function for long hours for me. I can realing imagine gaming a lot in this position and still having a straight back while being leaned back. I'm kinda interested in this chair now. I just hope the padding of it really is soft enough and also holds up for a long time. Edit: weird question regarding the leap v2, but because of its slightly forward looking headrest and 2 thin straps that hold it, can you bend it slightly backwards?
I have been sitting in the Kinn chair for couple years now (mine was Merryfair OEMs) and I like the lumbar support. I had several chair before with a lot of adjustment to the lumbar support but none support me like Kinn even without any adjustment. I tried both Gesture and Leap, thinking that I would go with Gesture for the armrest, I actually love Leap a lot more for how better it support my whole back. Gesture is at a similar level to Kinn chair while Leap just put my whole back in the pocket. Leap armrest adjustment is enough for me so I’m okay with the trade off.
Gesture is $1800 here in Japan. Leap is $1000. There's a 20% off coupon on their site I can use. I'm on the fence. I sat on both at a store and couldn't decide. The arm rests are cool on Gesture but Leap felt more comfortable overall? I've been sitting on a $6 kitchen chair with a silicone pad for the past 3 years so I doubt some tailbone pain can affect me anymore. I usually try to take a 5min break to stretch every hour anyway. I can get a used Gesture for around $700 on mercari. Is it worth it over Leap?
What did you buy if anything? Just curious. I just purchased an all-black reconditioned Leap 2V from BTOD for just under $600. which came with a Black Friday discount. I'm sitting in it for the first time and the only issue I have is the tailbone area is weak but I'm 6'2", 210lbs. Overall, right now I'm happy with it. All my life I've used whatever chair and this is the first semi-expensive (expensive) chair for me.
@@jeromedenis4754 I got a new Leap V2 of the official site. I like it overall but it sometimes gives me tingling in my right leg after some sitting. I've tried all possible chair settings combination and even got a foot stool. I can sit on it whole day and don't have a tailbone problem like people say.
To take advantage of the seat depth adjustment, you have to get up and shift your seating position. I don't see the advantage to changing seat depth without needing to get up when I have to get up and shift anyways.
I got my amia shipped today from yall!!! I'm so excited to get it and use it as I've been having a secretlab titan and it's been the most uncomfortable I've ever been on a chair especially giving me tailbone pain!
How easy is it to adjust the arms on both chairs? I put a bit of weight into my elbows when I'm on my PC, and I really don't want the arms to swivel out by themselves (like I experienced with the Herman Miller Aeron).
2 роки тому+7
Here in 🇩🇪 leap v2 cost like 1400$ and gesture half of that or less but I got rid of it cus back pain…. and bought leap v2 with headrest with 50% off
I don’t really like aggressive lumbar so I just took the lumbar system out on my leap v2, it’s still adjustable but just not as aggressive, but it’s no longer height adjustable only depth adjustable but it works for me
I've had trouble finding the proper spot to place the lumbar support for the leap, I'm about 6 feet tall and was wondering if there's a recommendation on where I should place it
2 роки тому+4
In last vid Ranking 30 comfort Tier list he said leap v2 is S Tier without lumbar…
Excellent video that really goes in-depth into the differences between the two and rare several years of use experience on the chairs. Really helped to inform an expensive purchase decision. Thanks!
interesting as the cutout in the gesture should scientifically result in relief to the tail bone area instead of pressure. i imagine thats why they designed it like that.
My Leap is giving me tailbone pain so i'm thinking about switching chairs. But it looks like the Gesture will have similar problems and not worth to switching to it. Any other recs?
I just ordered my first “pricey” chair from your website! (refurbished leap v2) hopefully it will be a good investment for my back and posture in long run
Edit: Found an official response from Steelcase where they state they have reduced the warranty to 5 years to "make things less complex for the consumer". See reply to this comment for more info. (TL;DR: ugly reason & ugly move) Edit2 (1 year after my post): Steelcase EU just announced that the now EU too has 12 years warranty instead of 5 years from now on!!! Yay!!! Hi, (I noticed the other comment about the warranty case as well). But considering the Gesture's warranty in the EU is only 5 years, does that mean that it's made of different (worse) materials in the EU or something? (I saw on the website they make them in France for the EU I think). I really want to get a Gesture but because the warranty in the EU is only 5 years, I'm kind of scared that the chair's quality is somehow worse than the US version... And it's also not the case that every chair brand in the EU has max 5 year warranty either, because Herman Miller still offers 12 years here. Hell, even Neuechair offers 12 years in the EU.... What on earth is going on with that massive warranty difference? Hope you can give me some insight on this
@@Sekkizan I just found an official reaction from Steelcase themselves about this on Reddit (6 months ago): They say the warranty is still 12 years for BUSINESS-partners, but for normal consumers the warranty has been reduced to 5 years because "it reduces complexity and erases the need to navigate through multiple confusing exceptions". In other words: A bunch of bullsh*t, they just don't want to repair older chairs anymore so they can save money. The people reacting on their post on Reddit are also furious about the decision and Steelcase's response to the furious replies is only "We will forward your feedback to our team." What a joke, it obviously has nothing to do with "making it easier for the costumer"; they just want to save money. I'm definitely reconsidering my choices now. The Gesture really looks tempting, but considering how Steelcase seems to be treating non-business consumers now, I'm definitely going to look for a different brand first.
@@btodtv thanks for the quick reply! I found a brand new one about 20 min from me on marketplace. Has the polished aluminum, head rest, and she says it has wool fabric? Do you know if they offer wool on the v2? And does that sound like a decent deal for 900$
For someone who is looking at the Gesture, but has also experienced quite a bit of coccyx pain, do you think that getting a piece of memory foam or some of Purple's seat padding and stuffing it in the cut out would be a good solution for fixing that issue?
We have a couple videos on seat cushions. The experience with them wasn’t great. While they can reduce some tailbone stuff, they raise you up too high in the chair and ruin the rest of the support from the lumbar, upper back, arms, etc -GK
@@btodtv Thanks for letting me know. Time to go with option 2: lose weight, do a bunch of squats, and build my butt muscles back up so it doesn't hurt as much lol
@y6mi I'm going to visit the Steelcase showroom in London soon to try them out. I'll come back and update my findings but will just be able to spend 30mins with the chairs to test as I don't have much time
@@maccheese969 I haven't gone because I can't see myself buying the chair new since it's so expensive. For second hand Steelcase chairs, here in the UK really on the leap v2 exists as 2nd hand, not the gesture. So I think my choice has already been set based on availability. I might go to try out the gesture one day for fun but no motivation or time to do so at the moment. If I do I'll update
@@maccheese969 I just went to the showroom today. I tried out both the Gesture and the Leap. Both felt good. But for me, the Leap felt better on my back. I felt it had more back support than the Gesture. However I believe in the end the choice between the 2 chairs is down to preference. Both are fine for a short individual like me
Nice video, I ordered a new Leap V2 here in the UK towards the end of April and it arrived around 2 weeks ago if I recall correctly. I feel like the backrest padding is somehow a little thin where my back tends to want to push back into it, I'm 5'8" and around 220-230lbs and if I push a finger through the fabric it's not hard to feel the plastic there at all. I already removed the additional lumbar support a few days back. From reading people on reddit etc they say it can take two weeks to even a month for your posture or back to adjust to the chair, but I don't really have any complaints about the actual seat part comfort wise. It's the back rest, and feels like my previous set up of a gaming chair with the recline back a bit and a pillow in between actually may be more comfortable than this. I wonder if the Aeron or Embody feel any softer on the back, or maybe I just need to get used to the leap. For my personal desk setup I would need to raise the arm rests all the way to get up to level with my desk, so when I do a lot of typing for work I generally just put my keyboard in my lap and work that way as I've experienced significant pain in one hand having my wrist bent over
I have the same problem with Aeron, been using it for almost a year now. Its a brilliant chair with great back support. Especially on days when there's too much work, hours go by without me feeling any discomfort whatsoever. But when I'm maybe trying to relax or just being bored while working, within the hour I'd feel how hard the back rest is. It still feels supportive, but not what you'd call comfortable. I was in fact hoping the Gesture or the Leap might help!
I don't like that little part of the plastic that sticks out on the plastic underside of the seat bottom on the Gesture. It looks like a seam or some joint where two panels come together... Maybe it only look weird in the videos, but it almost looks broken to me... Given how expensive that chair is, it's really surprising to me they would have some part like that that sticks out and looks bad. Leap just looks better from a design standpoint.
I've been looking at these videos for days and I still don't know what's best for me... I'm a software dev / digital artist and I just want something that's comfortable for my work and wont hurt my lower back... I feel like this shouldn't be so hard...
I assume both chairs are not available at your nearest store.. I own both chairs with headrest since past few years, Leap V2 is a better chair for lower back / lumbar support and it is also the one I use more often.
Wait... why can you see all the other colors? There's only 3 available to me on the website... Is that an old screenshot at 0:33 or am I missing something?? Oh its the difference between ready to ship or not... maybe someone else has the same problem ill leave this
This is an incredible video and will be very helpful in my decision to upgrade. I'm looking between one of these two and the embody from Herman Miller. I haven't had a chance to try out the Steelcase chairs yet, and I might not be able to, so if not, this video is my best option!.
Makes me sad that no one, including you guys, ships to Australia other than steelseries. I make decent money and even im pushed out of the market for getting one at full price. Super disappointing.
If you want to buy chairs like this go store and check yourself. I watched few videos and though Gesture is better than leap then i tried myself, for me is Leap much better.
I was sold on the Gesture after watching 7 hours of these videos until he said "it's unbearable to sit in for long periods of time". Back to the drawing board.
@@Man0War_Loki I just want the Gesture with a better seat pad. Literally has everything else I want in a chair maybe it's worth to take it apart and put more foam in the seat?
"They're really focused on fitting the 95th percentile...so you should be fine if you're 6'5"...uh you might want to check your understanding of height percentiles.
I bought a Gesture and got incredibly lucky, on Steelcase's site with a certain color configuration I got the price of the Gesture down to $659, that's with polished aluminum base and Oatmeal upholstery. The day after placing this order Steelcase raised prices to $1300ish for the Gesture and my configuration was no longer available at $659 or any discount. I'm curious as to how I was able to get such a good price, a system glitch? They took the time to build the chair from scratch so it's not some used or refurbished model, they advertised no sales at the time, and the deal was gone after I ordered, as if a mistake had been corrected. All I know now is I got an awesome chair brand new for an insane price, you can't find good condition Gestures used for that price. I feel like a lottery winner 😂 In regards to comfort - it's everything I expected and more. I got the standard Gesture without the additional lumbar support however it adapts to your backs curve and supports you in the correct posture without pushing you uncomfortably so I don't feel like the extra lumbar support is necessary when it already does a great job for someone who usually does use higher lumbar support options. However, lighter people, especially people around or under 120lbs might feel back pain because they may not weigh enough to get the back of the chair to properly flex to adapt to their backs ideal curve. I'm 180lbs and didn't have a problem but I can see how lighter people may, though the tension adjustment does adjust lumbar slightly and loosen the back up so it's easier to flex. It also encourages movement with the back being flexible - just don't slouch! The padding is thin so if you slouch for hours at a time you'll start to notice tailbone pain, correcting your posture, however, ends up being more comfortable and of course more supportive than slouching, but it would be nice to have the freedom to slouch a bit without pain so it's a very minor con. The chair is worth 659, and it's worth 1200. The value proposition decreases as you start add options like leather upholstery or accessories like headrests, but if you have 2500 for chair and want to go all out, this chair will likely not disappoint you. And if it does you can return it at no addition cost if it doesn't fit right. I spent a long time researching chairs and it was stressful at first but started to realize that I just buy quality rather than look for the best value, miraculously I got both! The Gesture and Leap are among the top 5 chairs that most people should consider buying in my opinion and I think BTOD echoes that. Appreciate the channel for your help in narrowing down my options. I somehow wrote a review on this chair - guess it's special enough to warrant yet another rave review. Reviews saying it caused pain worried me greatly but I bit the bullet and i'm glad I did.
Watch Next: We Picked The Best Office Chair For EVERY Price ua-cam.com/video/46cm_MaaiNo/v-deo.html
Steelcase case needs to make a chair with the back of the Leap v2, the seat of the Amia and the arms of the Gesture.
Underrated comment! Although I think it should lean back like a Think...
Botd does have the lemia which is a leap v2 with amia seat.
with removable arms.
And the headrest of the gesture!
My order from BTOD just arrived with my refurbished Leap v2. I'm sitting in it and initially like it. My biggest complaint after my initial setting is the seating area isn't long enough. Like Greg stated the tailbone area is a bit weak. I'm 6' 2" and just over 200 lbs., and finding the cushion bounce is good in the seat but the size of the seat length is too short. Before adjusting my seat forward to get the closest distance between the seat's edge to the back of my knees I was feeling good in my tail bone area (but of course my back and upper legs weren't). By sliding my seat forward all the way, my tailbone cushion area is weak. I'm only 6'2" and yet the Leap's seat is at its end on adjustments but the back of my knees are supposed to be 2" to 3" at the most from the edge of the front of the seat. The back of my knees is 4" from the edge of the seat's cushion (no wonder why that area of my legs are always aching). This is the big fail in the Leap for anyone my height or taller in my opinion. Where's the chair for taller people? Oh, right they didn't make it. Why hasn't Steelcase made a chair to fit taller people? Or why doesn't Steelcase offer a seat that's at least one inch longer for tall people? People are getting taller. Where's your video for taller people to watch on taller people's chair offerings? Thanks and overall you made a great video with this one Greg.
I'm in the same boat. I'm 6'4" 205 lbs and I originally had the seat adjusted all the way out but i was essentially sitting on the back base of the chair where there was no cushioning. I've since then brought the seat in a bit to compensate. I can fit my whole hand between the seat and the back of my knee but at least I have a bit of cushion. Definitely less than ideal since I didn't get the Fern becuase it was said to have a large gap in the back of the seat for tall people. I just wish manufacturers could offer a slightly deeper seat, even as an add on, to account for taller people .
Went to local distributor and tried both chairs. I'm 5'10 and 182lbs and normal build. My sense and test showed that the Gesture was just a more solid and comfortable option. I like it that with the Gesture, there's a little back movement on full up tilt (6.40). It's feels more natural as it seems to me that your body is always moving and this small movement helps. The tilt function, when the personal tension is adjusted is a joy. The Lumbar option gives enough support without overkill. The seat and back are very supportive and comfortable. I opted and purchased the Gesture. Received today and very happy . The armrest movement is beyond brilliant . Gesture wins !!
How about the lumbar sup differences? I want the lumbar sup like Leap mentioned in the video but also the Gesture headrest😮💨
I'm very tall and heavy but I feel I liked the leap more. I only got to sit I'm them for a short period of time today. I did like both a lot, but was leaning towards the leap in store. Going to go back again and make my decision when I'm ready to buy
@@holdmyown32 hi- did you try them again?
I own several quality chairs including the original Leap, Leap V2, Gesture, Amia and Embody Gaming. The Gesture is my favorite. The Embody is great but takes a long time to get used to. And for my 5’8” body, my shoulder blades feel restricted by the curved top of the back of the Embody. The Gesture just feels very comfortable. I’m ready to toss/donate my original Leap.
I noticed the tailbone issues on the Gesture as well, which was really disheartening for a while. The Gesture is the first high class chair I ever bought, so I was a little disappointed. But after a while, I noticed it's really dependent on how I sit in it. I liked to slouch a lot in other chairs, and the Gesture immediately punishes that behaviour. But as mentioned in the video, it's because the Gesture wants you to sit in a more proper position and is very comfortable when you do. Whenever I start slouching and it starts to hurt my tailbone, I am reminded to get in a more upright position - with any other chair, I'd start slouching again in less than five minutes, but with the Gesture, it's more like five hours. Plus, with the way it tilts and its adjustability, I barely feel the need to "plank" in the chair anymore. It definitely requires some adjustment to the seating experience, but it's really rewarding for that.
Yes, slouching can have a huge negative impact on your tailbone. Glad to see you getting the Gesture to work for your needs. It is a solid chair! -GK
I'm not 100% sure, but I think this also applies to the leap v2 chair. Super comfortable if it's setup properly and you're sitting in it properly. As soon as I slouch, tailbone area gets stiff and it start to get painful.
Yes, this is true for the Leap as well -GK
@@btodtv Btw you guys are the real MVPs in this new age of wfh! Your channel convinced me to finally purchase a fully refurbished leap v2 and I couldn't be happier! It's incredible how sitting on this chair feels like it's repairing my chronic back pain / arthritis that started 13 years ago from using a painful-to-sit on chair with zero back support that was given to me for free as a bachelor. What a hell of a ride it has been and what a huge difference an ergonomic chair makes to your everyday wellbeing. Ofc having a budget now helps also.. but BTODtv, you're doing god's work! Thank you so much for what you do
Thank you so much. Glad we could help!! -GK
My major issue as a 5’6” person is that these headrests are too high just like all office chair headrests. If you’re not 5’8” or taller the headrest shoves your head forward and ruins your posture. I would love to get a chair with head support but I can’t find one short enough
I tried out both of them and just by comfort, Leap wins it for me.. If Steelcase could add the Gesture's arms to the Leap that would be an awesome chair.. I really like the Gesture's arms, what a great idea to make them very adjustable.
The arms on the Leap are no slouch though ;) -GK
@@btodtv ... I have a Leap in my office and never tried a Gesture. What is the difference between the armrest adjustment options from the end-result point of view. I understand that the the movement in the Gesture can be more natural, but at the end of the day both adjust vertical, wide, depth and pivot with similar range. Don't they?
I have been sitting in a leap v2 for about 13yrs for work, both with and without the headrest. I also have had one at home (without the headrest) for about 7yrs. I am very comfortable in this chair. I like the one without the headrest for work and would have liked one for home but it costs too much. I bought the chair for around $600 in the configuration I wanted back then from an overstocked website, now they are ~$400, to get one with the headrest I cannot find one under $1200. The chair has held up fairly well. I spec'ed one with "leather", the seat portion has been flaking off for years, the arms did too. I replaced the arm pads cheaper ones from Amazon for `$20-$40 (not as soft and not pleather), Steelcase wanted $200. Given, at home, I basically live in front of my pc without shoes and my feet up on the seat a lot. I did find a place that will send out a refurbished seat portion for about $275 when you send back your old one, I have not done it yet. I have sat in the gesture at work in different work centers on and off, I did not like it. I did like the headrest and the arms, hated the seat. The seat always felt like it was making me slide off the front giving me a wedgie over time, this could be a lack of adjusting the seat properly but it was not for lack of trying. For context I am a male and have been between 150-165lbs over the years and probably don't have the best posture.
I have tried both over the past 2 weeks. I like the lumbar adjustment options on the leap but it's very aggressive and forces you to sit slightly reclined to be comfortable. I found the seat to be quite firm. I wasn't a huge fan of the armrests at first but they have grown on me. I had quite a bit of tailbone pain from the leap after a few days. I thought it might disappear over time but couldn't help but think the Gesture might be a better option. Swapped it over today and I do like how the gesture is less agressive in the lumbar and the seat is a bit softer. I can easily push back and recline if I feel I'm getting too stiff in the chair. This is helpful when I'm upright working and then I just want to push back. It's a shame I can't lock the chair into a position but you can't really do that with the leap either. The lumbar system does feel like it's digging into my back on both chairs. I guess I need to give it a few days. It's a tough one. The leap wins in some areas where the gesture doesn't and vice versa. I'm probably going to recline more throughout the day in the gesture then go back to the tasking position which might be a good thing.
I just got a gesture from Steelcase Japan last week. They have been offering a 30% off for this chair and got out of stock of the leap. So easy to make up my mind to get the gesture, and no regrets
Wow that is a steep discount! -GK
Ordered a Gesture since there's a sale in the EU now making it cheaper than the Leap or Amia. I had the Leap v2 for a couple of months and couldn't get used to it, not sure if it was the crooked back defect it had from factory(replaced once, 2nd one was even more crooked), or I just didn't get along with the aggressive backrest. I think it was both, but crooked backs on a 1000$ chair is not ok, so I returned it.
Hopefully the Gesture doesn't come with any factory defects and I can finally enjoy a good ergonomic chair, because I've had horrible luck with both Steelcase and Herman Miller(Sayl, forward tilt broken from factory, cylinder replaced twice, plastic base replaced once, in 2 years).
Hi, thanks for your input. Could you let me know what you think about gesture when it will arrive? Im curious if its better than leap, I also dont like when backrest is not straight.
@@markorimar6245 Hello, so I just had to cancel the order, Steelcase in Europe is having some supply issues with the Gesture and the delivery would have been around march. I need something sooner than that. Guess my bad luck streak did not end :D
If it helps, I tried the Gesture in a showroom some time ago. It was a much more "free" chair than the Leap, almost requiring you to find your position, it was only there to assist.
The Leap is the opposite, it is a very restrictive chair for both the back and the seat, by any standards, not only Steelcase.
Obviously this depends somewhat on your body, but bottom line the Gesture and the Leap are completely opposite chairs in my experience. If you can't try them in person, the Gesture may be a safer buy.
Which one would you recommend if don’t sit in them properly all the time? Sometimes I sit with one leg up and kinda sideways or sit partly slid down the chair.
Probably the Amia to be honest. Especially if you’re slouching a bit -GK
I have a spinal injury that resulted in neck surgery and I can only sit in a very specific position. I need to heavily slouch as a correct upright position cause my arms to go numb. I need to be able to sit in my chair for up to 14 hours a day, and currently the chair I have won't go low enough to get my feet flat on the floor and accommodate the correct position required. Out of both of the se chairs I need the one that is the most adjustable towards a heavily slouched position, that will allow lumbar support to try and avoid lower back issues. I'm finding it difficult to decide between these two chairs as the reviews are all so varying.
I got my gesture for 350 new of a local auction in Michigan that auctions returns, over stock, shelf pulls. Had the original stickers and books
spot check?
I nearly didn’t buy a gesture because of your review, mainly cause of the concerns of the seat comfort,
I’ve come from sitting on a secret labs Titan, and I can confirm that the gesture is far far more comfortable,
I was worried about the foam in the middle of seat being hard on the tailbone as you suggest in the video, but it’s honestly just not the case, been sitting in the gesture for 10hours a day and it’s really quite comfortable,
I also don’t have other high end chairs to compare it to, nor have I tried many,
However as a 6”2’ individual I am very Happy with the gesture with the headrest 👌
Reviewer has the build of a preteen girl, that might account for the difference in your experience.
@@guidoravsreviewer is 6foot 170lbs...
@@jakebrowning2373 you're proving his point...
"unbearable to sit in for long periods of time" is probably the last thing you're looking for in a chair that costs over 1,000$
It’s also amazing how people can think that a $1,000 chair is made for $50 in China. -RB
The Gesture’s frame isn’t made predominantly of aluminum and the seat isn’t made predominantly of polyester. You are also making a a lot of assumptions that these chairs come from a low end factory with the lowest paid workers in the country. You are just spreading misinformation at this point. -RB
You not knowing the difference between a chair frame being made from aluminum and that simply being an upgrade to the wheel base shows that you should not be commenting on this. -RB
@The13thRonin cost is equal to how important it is to you, not material. If the cure for cancer cost 1 dollar and sells for 100k, people would buy it
@@TemujinRKhan fact
Has anyone had experience with the gesture? The more upright position, less aggressive lumbar support and good headrest look very appealing to me but as someone who does long hours with a mix of writing and coding the stiffer front and weak tailbone region also sound worrying.
I'd like to get a gist of if these are common issues or something Greg is particularly sensitive to.
What are the Leap's upholstery color? Is this Era sprout or Olivine?
What's wider? Planning to cross-sit and a wider chair is always more comfy in my experience
FYI: Steelcase EU announced a few days ago that they now offer 12 year warranty instead of 5 years.
You mean, they went down from 12 to 5 years only.
@@Iksy No, they went from 5 years to 12 years all of a sudden
@@moepskie many of their chairs are 1000+ dollars and they only had 5 years?
Please review the Steelcase Karman whenever you can get your hands on one. I want to know if it really fixes the problem other mesh chairs have re: uncomfortable frame.
Worst case we will see it at Neocon in June :) -GK
I was fortunate that I was able to try out both chairs before I shelled out over a $1k. I ruled out the Leap2 for two reasons. First, the harsh lumbar support and the second was the gap between the seat and the back. That gap was constantly "pinching" my backside. The only concern is how comfortable the Gesture will be on my tailbone as it was damaged during the birth of my first child. I don't have the chair yet as it was a custom order. I'm hoping all those adjustments will prove helpful towards making the Gesture comfortable for me.
Please keep us posted how it works for you! -GK
How do you like the chair?
@@gangatalishis unfortunately, I still don't have it. It's been two months.
Any updates?
^
Which chair is better for gaming with a mouse? I need to be sitting upright with good back support and the ability to freely move my whole arm around.
I sat on the gesture for the first time, for around 9 hours at work and it was perfect
i love the armrest and headrest of the gesture, but i prefer a better padding on the leap, yet you said both have thinner seat-padding. i have issues with tailbone pain on my current chair, so both seem like bad upgrade for me? i look for comfort, support and need to sit long hours, being a bit on the heavier side myself.
i got a leap v2 and it made my tailbone start having intense agony. It was so bad i had to send the chair back its crazy because the chair is so adjustable yet nothing i did helped the pain.
Will you comment on the fact that the warranty was reduced to 5(!) years for EU customers? I was going to pull the trigger on a gesture when I noticed this, now I'm almost completely turned off unless I find a very good price somewhere.
It’s definitely disappointing for those outside North America -GK
Is yet mostly anyway only gas spring/
Some chairs only 2 year and you get parts only in first months… in gaming chairs…
I'd love to see a video looking for the best office chair IF you have cats. No kidding. I had an Ergohuman chair my boss passed over and that mesh was screaming for help every time my cat was on it. It was a claws magnet. He loved kneading it.
Cats are tough. I don’t really have a suggestion other than hard plastic maybe. That won’t be very comfortable-GK
@@btodtv I bought a Secretlab Titan which may be the closest thing to hard plastic when you sit on it. The "Softweave" one. At least my cats doesn't tear it apart. That thing it's almost a tank. And, I passed over the Ergochair to my dad to help him with his back problems. Now I have to buy a new one for me to sit on. 😹
A sacrificial chair helps. But it depends on how you train your cat. Mine knows some chairs are not safe to touch and will result in getting chased around the house with a slipper. Don't need to hit the cat, just slap the slipper on something and make noise.
I just sit on a testing embody from a site for a little over a week now also had some tailbone pain the first 2-3days but it went away but slowly I feel like for how I sit and what i do in it (mostly gaming, and then also for straight a lot of hours at a time) the back on the embody feels too hard for me. Because I game and for ove ra decade always tend to slouch after a while no matter what (even on the embody which made the back feel even harder for me) I feel like the leap v2's "slouch function" where the arms and seat not tilt back with the backrest, is exactly how people that game slide down in their chairs and get a crooked back. I did and do the same even in the embody sometimes. And I can imagine with a light slouch in the leap v2, having the arm rest still straight on your desk height, this looks like The perfect chair function for long hours for me. I can realing imagine gaming a lot in this position and still having a straight back while being leaned back. I'm kinda interested in this chair now. I just hope the padding of it really is soft enough and also holds up for a long time.
Edit: weird question regarding the leap v2, but because of its slightly forward looking headrest and 2 thin straps that hold it, can you bend it slightly backwards?
I have been sitting in the Kinn chair for couple years now (mine was Merryfair OEMs) and I like the lumbar support. I had several chair before with a lot of adjustment to the lumbar support but none support me like Kinn even without any adjustment.
I tried both Gesture and Leap, thinking that I would go with Gesture for the armrest, I actually love Leap a lot more for how better it support my whole back. Gesture is at a similar level to Kinn chair while Leap just put my whole back in the pocket.
Leap armrest adjustment is enough for me so I’m okay with the trade off.
Gesture is $1800 here in Japan.
Leap is $1000.
There's a 20% off coupon on their site I can use.
I'm on the fence. I sat on both at a store and couldn't decide. The arm rests are cool on Gesture but Leap felt more comfortable overall?
I've been sitting on a $6 kitchen chair with a silicone pad for the past 3 years so I doubt some tailbone pain can affect me anymore. I usually try to take a 5min break to stretch every hour anyway.
I can get a used Gesture for around $700 on mercari. Is it worth it over Leap?
If you want a headrest, and the gesture you found has one, I’d do that -GK
What did you buy if anything? Just curious. I just purchased an all-black reconditioned Leap 2V from BTOD for just under $600. which came with a Black Friday discount. I'm sitting in it for the first time and the only issue I have is the tailbone area is weak but I'm 6'2", 210lbs. Overall, right now I'm happy with it. All my life I've used whatever chair and this is the first semi-expensive (expensive) chair for me.
@@jeromedenis4754
I got a new Leap V2 of the official site. I like it overall but it sometimes gives me tingling in my right leg after some sitting. I've tried all possible chair settings combination and even got a foot stool. I can sit on it whole day and don't have a tailbone problem like people say.
To take advantage of the seat depth adjustment, you have to get up and shift your seating position. I don't see the advantage to changing seat depth without needing to get up when I have to get up and shift anyways.
I got my amia shipped today from yall!!! I'm so excited to get it and use it as I've been having a secretlab titan and it's been the most uncomfortable I've ever been on a chair especially giving me tailbone pain!
Thank you for your support! I hope you like it as much as I do -GK
How easy is it to adjust the arms on both chairs? I put a bit of weight into my elbows when I'm on my PC, and I really don't want the arms to swivel out by themselves (like I experienced with the Herman Miller Aeron).
Here in 🇩🇪 leap v2 cost like 1400$ and gesture half of that or less but I got rid of it cus back pain…. and bought leap v2 with headrest with 50% off
Yea I think cus they said it’s made in Mexico and gesture in europe 🇫🇷 atleast mine gesture
And how do you like it?
@@Maciiiek better than gesture, gesture give the problems he talks about... tailbone issues...
I have a question for you guys at BTODtv :) Can the Leap V2's seat be transferred to a Gesture, like you've done with Amia?
whats wrong with gesture seat
I don’t really like aggressive lumbar so I just took the lumbar system out on my leap v2, it’s still adjustable but just not as aggressive, but it’s no longer height adjustable only depth adjustable but it works for me
I've had trouble finding the proper spot to place the lumbar support for the leap, I'm about 6 feet tall and was wondering if there's a recommendation on where I should place it
In last vid Ranking 30 comfort Tier list he said leap v2 is S Tier without lumbar…
You might want to consider removing it all together -GK
@@btodtvCan you explain why you would recommend this for someone around 6 feet tall? Thanks!
Excellent video that really goes in-depth into the differences between the two and rare several years of use experience on the chairs. Really helped to inform an expensive purchase decision. Thanks!
Thanks for the great comparison! Minor question: is the fabric shown on the Gesture here the Era Night Owl or the Cogent Graphite?
interesting as the cutout in the gesture should scientifically result in relief to the tail bone area instead of pressure. i imagine thats why they designed it like that.
My Leap is giving me tailbone pain so i'm thinking about switching chairs. But it looks like the Gesture will have similar problems and not worth to switching to it. Any other recs?
The Amia -GK
I just ordered my first “pricey” chair from your website! (refurbished leap v2) hopefully it will be a good investment for my back and posture in long run
Same, i have high hopes for it. Regardless it should be a big improvement from old secret lab omega
Edit: Found an official response from Steelcase where they state they have reduced the warranty to 5 years to "make things less complex for the consumer". See reply to this comment for more info. (TL;DR: ugly reason & ugly move)
Edit2 (1 year after my post): Steelcase EU just announced that the now EU too has 12 years warranty instead of 5 years from now on!!! Yay!!!
Hi, (I noticed the other comment about the warranty case as well). But considering the Gesture's warranty in the EU is only 5 years, does that mean that it's made of different (worse) materials in the EU or something? (I saw on the website they make them in France for the EU I think). I really want to get a Gesture but because the warranty in the EU is only 5 years, I'm kind of scared that the chair's quality is somehow worse than the US version... And it's also not the case that every chair brand in the EU has max 5 year warranty either, because Herman Miller still offers 12 years here. Hell, even Neuechair offers 12 years in the EU.... What on earth is going on with that massive warranty difference? Hope you can give me some insight on this
I don't think it has anything to do with the quality of the chairs, maybe just some EU law or the fact that they have less staff/factory in europe ?
@@Sekkizan I just found an official reaction from Steelcase themselves about this on Reddit (6 months ago): They say the warranty is still 12 years for BUSINESS-partners, but for normal consumers the warranty has been reduced to 5 years because "it reduces complexity and erases the need to navigate through multiple confusing exceptions".
In other words: A bunch of bullsh*t, they just don't want to repair older chairs anymore so they can save money. The people reacting on their post on Reddit are also furious about the decision and Steelcase's response to the furious replies is only "We will forward your feedback to our team."
What a joke, it obviously has nothing to do with "making it easier for the costumer"; they just want to save money.
I'm definitely reconsidering my choices now. The Gesture really looks tempting, but considering how Steelcase seems to be treating non-business consumers now, I'm definitely going to look for a different brand first.
@@Sekkizan Steelcase EU just announced that the now EU too has 12 years warranty instead of 5 years from now on, yay!
First time watching a video from this Channel. The informative content in this video alone has made me Sub. Great stuff!
Just curious how tall are you and would you reccomend the leap v2 for someone that's around 6'3" 155lbs?
We have people using it in the office from 5’2” up to 6’3” with no fit issues. It should work great for you -GK
@@btodtv thanks for the quick reply! I found a brand new one about 20 min from me on marketplace. Has the polished aluminum, head rest, and she says it has wool fabric? Do you know if they offer wool on the v2? And does that sound like a decent deal for 900$
For someone who is looking at the Gesture, but has also experienced quite a bit of coccyx pain, do you think that getting a piece of memory foam or some of Purple's seat padding and stuffing it in the cut out would be a good solution for fixing that issue?
We have a couple videos on seat cushions. The experience with them wasn’t great. While they can reduce some tailbone stuff, they raise you up too high in the chair and ruin the rest of the support from the lumbar, upper back, arms, etc -GK
@@btodtv Thanks for letting me know. Time to go with option 2: lose weight, do a bunch of squats, and build my butt muscles back up so it doesn't hurt as much lol
What color is that green leap v2, your willow color?
I'm 164cm so like 5' 3 or 4 ish.... I was leaning towards gesture but someone said they aren't good for people of my size? What do you think
@y6mi I'm going to visit the Steelcase showroom in London soon to try them out. I'll come back and update my findings but will just be able to spend 30mins with the chairs to test as I don't have much time
Any update?
@@maccheese969 I haven't gone because I can't see myself buying the chair new since it's so expensive. For second hand Steelcase chairs, here in the UK really on the leap v2 exists as 2nd hand, not the gesture. So I think my choice has already been set based on availability. I might go to try out the gesture one day for fun but no motivation or time to do so at the moment. If I do I'll update
@@ThatSameer thanks!
@@maccheese969 I just went to the showroom today. I tried out both the Gesture and the Leap. Both felt good. But for me, the Leap felt better on my back. I felt it had more back support than the Gesture. However I believe in the end the choice between the 2 chairs is down to preference. Both are fine for a short individual like me
Why are they so expensive now?
Herman miller jacked up their prices too.
Nice video, I ordered a new Leap V2 here in the UK towards the end of April and it arrived around 2 weeks ago if I recall correctly. I feel like the backrest padding is somehow a little thin where my back tends to want to push back into it, I'm 5'8" and around 220-230lbs and if I push a finger through the fabric it's not hard to feel the plastic there at all. I already removed the additional lumbar support a few days back. From reading people on reddit etc they say it can take two weeks to even a month for your posture or back to adjust to the chair, but I don't really have any complaints about the actual seat part comfort wise. It's the back rest, and feels like my previous set up of a gaming chair with the recline back a bit and a pillow in between actually may be more comfortable than this. I wonder if the Aeron or Embody feel any softer on the back, or maybe I just need to get used to the leap. For my personal desk setup I would need to raise the arm rests all the way to get up to level with my desk, so when I do a lot of typing for work I generally just put my keyboard in my lap and work that way as I've experienced significant pain in one hand having my wrist bent over
Have you gotten used to it yet?
I have the same problem with Aeron, been using it for almost a year now. Its a brilliant chair with great back support. Especially on days when there's too much work, hours go by without me feeling any discomfort whatsoever. But when I'm maybe trying to relax or just being bored while working, within the hour I'd feel how hard the back rest is. It still feels supportive, but not what you'd call comfortable. I was in fact hoping the Gesture or the Leap might help!
Love the video, but can you please add metric units when you mentioned inches, feet, etc? Thank you :)
Why do they need to convert? Can’t you do the conversion?
do you know if the gesture needs a break in period? it feels so stiff when compared to t he leap v2
It is a more stiff chair than the Leap -GK
I don't like that little part of the plastic that sticks out on the plastic underside of the seat bottom on the Gesture. It looks like a seam or some joint where two panels come together... Maybe it only look weird in the videos, but it almost looks broken to me... Given how expensive that chair is, it's really surprising to me they would have some part like that that sticks out and looks bad. Leap just looks better from a design standpoint.
Would you choose the Gesture if you had someone refit it with a thicker more comfortable foam?
What about the Steelcase Please Air?
I've been looking at these videos for days and I still don't know what's best for me...
I'm a software dev / digital artist and I just want something that's comfortable for my work and wont hurt my lower back... I feel like this shouldn't be so hard...
I assume both chairs are not available at your nearest store.. I own both chairs with headrest since past few years, Leap V2 is a better chair for lower back / lumbar support and it is also the one I use more often.
@@zypern16 thank you for this. I'll shift my focus to the leap v2 then.
U just need to seat in both and only after that you can choose. All those videos good but without real test drive all that words useless
@@zypern16what about the leap V1? Is the V2 more comfy
I just need my butt to not be so sore, then again I'm using the hyken lol with a seat pad currently 140 pounds was looking at the gesture
Pretty interesting that leap is so expensive now. I picked one up new 6 years ago for about $500.
I’m 5’5 165 which would be better for me?
tried both and got an Embody instead.
How about flatulence smell absorption? Do they handle some gas without retaining the smell?
I am former Steelcase AP lead designer, is interested to see this in-depth vs review , good work 👍🏼 and u r right the leap head rest is lame 🤣
Wait... why can you see all the other colors? There's only 3 available to me on the website... Is that an old screenshot at 0:33 or am I missing something??
Oh its the difference between ready to ship or not... maybe someone else has the same problem ill leave this
Yes, they have their quick ship program and then the standard ship program on the website. Both chairs will have different options -GK
This is an incredible video and will be very helpful in my decision to upgrade. I'm looking between one of these two and the embody from Herman Miller.
I haven't had a chance to try out the Steelcase chairs yet, and I might not be able to, so if not, this video is my best option!.
Did you find a chair? Also how tall are you?
Makes me sad that no one, including you guys, ships to Australia other than steelseries. I make decent money and even im pushed out of the market for getting one at full price. Super disappointing.
Amia?
If you want to buy chairs like this go store and check yourself. I watched few videos and though Gesture is better than leap then i tried myself, for me is Leap much better.
why do these chairs all have such a hard suspension?
Man those critics feels like every chair above 1000 bucks has some serious issues.
Why do we have to accept high-end chairs having a thin seat pad?
They aren't thin...they just aren't going to be super plush thick pads. These is they aren't good for you long term -Greg
leap is a great chair
I was sold on the Gesture after watching 7 hours of these videos until he said "it's unbearable to sit in for long periods of time". Back to the drawing board.
Exactly sounded too good to be true and then that one sentence was said and I was like... well fuck
@@Man0War_Loki I just want the Gesture with a better seat pad. Literally has everything else I want in a chair maybe it's worth to take it apart and put more foam in the seat?
Not willing to pay 1200€ for a seat, where i only get 5 instead of 12 years warranty. What a joke to us in germany.
This chair is 2K more than the Gesture, about 600 dollars less.
You sound exactly like Matt Damon wtf
"They're really focused on fitting the 95th percentile...so you should be fine if you're 6'5"...uh you might want to check your understanding of height percentiles.
I bought a Gesture and got incredibly lucky, on Steelcase's site with a certain color configuration I got the price of the Gesture down to $659, that's with polished aluminum base and Oatmeal upholstery. The day after placing this order Steelcase raised prices to $1300ish for the Gesture and my configuration was no longer available at $659 or any discount. I'm curious as to how I was able to get such a good price, a system glitch? They took the time to build the chair from scratch so it's not some used or refurbished model, they advertised no sales at the time, and the deal was gone after I ordered, as if a mistake had been corrected. All I know now is I got an awesome chair brand new for an insane price, you can't find good condition Gestures used for that price. I feel like a lottery winner 😂
In regards to comfort - it's everything I expected and more. I got the standard Gesture without the additional lumbar support however it adapts to your backs curve and supports you in the correct posture without pushing you uncomfortably so I don't feel like the extra lumbar support is necessary when it already does a great job for someone who usually does use higher lumbar support options.
However, lighter people, especially people around or under 120lbs might feel back pain because they may not weigh enough to get the back of the chair to properly flex to adapt to their backs ideal curve. I'm 180lbs and didn't have a problem but I can see how lighter people may, though the tension adjustment does adjust lumbar slightly and loosen the back up so it's easier to flex.
It also encourages movement with the back being flexible - just don't slouch! The padding is thin so if you slouch for hours at a time you'll start to notice tailbone pain, correcting your posture, however, ends up being more comfortable and of course more supportive than slouching, but it would be nice to have the freedom to slouch a bit without pain so it's a very minor con.
The chair is worth 659, and it's worth 1200. The value proposition decreases as you start add options like leather upholstery or accessories like headrests, but if you have 2500 for chair and want to go all out, this chair will likely not disappoint you. And if it does you can return it at no addition cost if it doesn't fit right.
I spent a long time researching chairs and it was stressful at first but started to realize that I just buy quality rather than look for the best value, miraculously I got both! The Gesture and Leap are among the top 5 chairs that most people should consider buying in my opinion and I think BTOD echoes that. Appreciate the channel for your help in narrowing down my options. I somehow wrote a review on this chair - guess it's special enough to warrant yet another rave review. Reviews saying it caused pain worried me greatly but I bit the bullet and i'm glad I did.
When I spend $1000 on a chair I expect a car to be thrown in with it.
why are these chairs so expensive bruhhh
chair weath that price ....OMG people you insane.
all of these chairs are overpriced. period
first!!!!!!!!!!
Second
Jesus
Who the hell wants to pay that much for an office chair. That's insane