Bags have been getting away with floor behavior for far too long. We pack them with laptops, camera lenses, snacks, mystery cables, and at least one receipt from 2022, then just flop the whole civilization onto mud, concrete, airport carpet, brewery floors, or that suspicious wet spot by the picnic table.

The Mojoh Ryzer Go Universal Bag Stand is a spring-loaded little exoskeleton for people who believe their backpack deserves legs, dignity, and maybe a little personal space. It attaches to the bottom of a bag and pops out into a three-legged stand, lifting your gear about 13.7 inches off the ground instead of letting it participate in whatever is happening down there.
The basic idea is wonderfully simple: mount the Ryzer Go to a backpack, tote, camera bag, tool bag, cooler bag, diaper bag, pickleball bag, or other flat-bottomed gear hauler, then twist the handle to deploy the legs. Mojoh says the design uses springs to open quickly and folds back flat when it is time to carry the bag normally again.

This is one of those products that sounds unnecessary until your bag has spent one afternoon leaning against a picnic bench like it just lost a bar fight. A stand keeps the bag upright, easier to reach, and away from dirt, puddles, bugs, jobsite dust, gym floors, and all the other surfaces that make you wonder if humanity peaked at the invention of hooks.
A Bag Stand For People Who Use Bags Like Mobile Garages
Mojoh positions the Ryzer Go as a universal stand rather than a bag built around one fixed frame. That matters because the use cases get oddly broad very quickly. Campers can keep packs out of the dirt. Photographers can keep camera gear from tipping sideways in grass. Tradespeople can park a tool bag at working height. Parents can keep diaper bags away from restaurant floors, which are basically public science experiments with fries.

The product is designed around three size options. Mojoh lists a small size for bags up to 10 inches wide, a medium for bags up to 14 inches wide, and a large for bags up to 20 inches wide. The medium version is described as weighing about 1.2 pounds, while the large comes in around 1.9 pounds, so it adds real hardware but not a full lawn chair to your daily carry.
The listed build uses aluminum legs and an ABS/acetal technical polymer body, with straps and clamps holding the system to the bag. The company also says it can support up to 75 pounds, which is a comforting number for anyone whose bag has crossed the line from “everyday carry” into “small private storage unit.”

Twist, Deploy, Avoid The Floor
The Ryzer Go’s funniest trick is that it gives the bag a little transformation sequence without requiring you to become the person who assembles camp furniture for 11 minutes while everyone else eats chips. The stand folds flat while carried, then opens when you twist the handle and let the spring-loaded legs do their thing.
That also means the product is not trying to replace your bag. It is trying to domesticate the one you already trust. Mojoh shows it with outdoor packs, tool bags, camera bags, travel bags, cooler bags, and sport bags, which is a nice way of saying the Ryzer Go has looked at every floppy rectangle in your life and decided it could use ankles.

There are some obvious fit realities here. A bag stand needs a compatible shape, enough structure to sit cleanly on the platform, and the right size Ryzer Go for the bag width. If your current bag is a soft shapeless dumpling with straps, the laws of physics may still request a meeting. For structured backpacks, gear bags, and totes, though, the concept makes a lot of practical sense.
Price And Availability
The Ryzer Go was queued from Mojoh Gear’s 2026 launch materials and Kickstarter campaign. Mojoh’s media page describes manufacturing as complete and points readers to the campaign, while the presale page advertises an MSRP of and VIP Kickstarter pricing at 40% off. Since Kickstarter pricing and reward availability can change, treat those numbers as campaign-era pricing rather than a permanent retail promise.

If your bag has spent years doing the sad little sidewalk slump, this is a strangely satisfying fix. It is not glamorous. It is not trying to be. It is a tiny deployable landing gear system for the stuff you drag through the world, and honestly, some of our belongings have earned that much civilization.
Image credit: Mojoh Gear.

