Product Stability Improvements for Larger Breeds
Large breeds do not need a marketing label—they need proof in the frame. When a fifteen-pound cat hits a platform, narrow posts and modest bases telegraph movement instantly.
Globlazer’s recent stability improvements for larger breeds focus on three visible levers: wider top platforms, lower center of gravity through base revisions, and post spacing that reduces torque on diagonal launches.
We studied failure modes owners describe in plain language—the tower “looks fine” until the big cat climbs, the top perch that wiggles when someone walks past, the base that creeps on hardwood over weeks.
Platform width was the first fix. Large cats need to turn, groom, and resettle without hanging off edges. A wide perch reads as generosity; a narrow one reads as risk, even if the cat tries it once.
Base work followed. Thicker plates, broader footprints, weight paths mapped for staggered use—one cat above, one climbing below. Stability is not a single static push; it is repeated real traffic.
These improvements roll into existing tall lines rather than a separate “heavy duty” gimmick. The goal is simple: a Globlazer cat tree should feel believable for Maine Coons, Ragdolls, and big mixed rescues without turning the living room into industrial scenery.
Large cats will always stress furniture harder than small ones. Our job is to make that stress boring—in the best engineering sense.
New Arrivals
Fresh designs, new colors, and limited releases for modern cat homes.
