Saw Chee Hsin tile #109/159 on FB, in Nobl suitcase / luggage commercial. This carry-on size sells for $249, and up: different colors cost differently. Both colors, blue and grey, are pre-ordered and will arrive on January 13 and 15, 2026, respectively.
I’ve seen this brand for a while, and I like its extra bells and whistles of carry-on, such as a handbag hook and a water bottle tray.
Today, I saw that the floor tile they used in their commercial on FB is identical to the one in my childhood home in Beijing. So I have to buy one.
The Nobl website is very difficult to use—painfully slow and unresponsive.
Up front, a spinning wheel pops up offering up to $100 off. My spin landed on $100, displaying “You’ve Won $100 OFF,” along with the code WELCOME100 (generated instantly on the site) and a personal code 4HHPS6BRN0MQ sent by email, which requires a minimum spend of $500. Both were issued after I entered my email address and phone number. The following day, they sent me another code for $20 off, which works.
However, when I enter either code, I get the same message:
Overall, this looks and sounds scammy.
I’ve been aware of this brand for a while and like the carry-on’s thoughtful features, such as the handbag hook and water-bottle tray. A nostalgic detail in their Facebook ad—the same floor tile from my childhood home in Beijing—finally pushed me to buy.
The carry-on starts at $249, with prices varying by color. Both blue and grey are currently on pre-order, arriving in mid-January 2026.
Unfortunately, the Nobl website is painfully slow and unresponsive. The spinning-wheel promotion is gimmicky, and the discount codes don’t work. After entering my email and phone number, I was “awarded” $100 off, but both codes ( WELCOME100 generated instantly on the site, and a personal code 4HHPS6BRN0MQ from email) immediately returned the message:
Overall, it looks and feels scammy.
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