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IMALENT MS32 200,000-Lumen Rechargeable Torch

Outdoor Gear · IMALENT · Affiliate

The MS32 hits 200,000 lumens and throws light 1,618 meters — numbers that hold up in the field, not just on a spec sheet. It's heavy and purpose-built, but if you need the brightest flashlight available, this is the one.

Ross
Ross Owner & Reviewer
4.4/5
$699.99 Price at time of review
Updated May 2026

TL;DR Summary

4.4/5 Great

Pros

  • 200,000 lumen peak output verified at distance — 1,618m beam reach is real-world accurate
  • Active cooling fan extends sustained high-output runtime beyond passive-cooled competitors
  • USB-C charging eliminates proprietary cable dependency in the field
  • Multi-mode interface gives usable runtime across low, medium, and high settings
  • Built for professional use cases — search and rescue, large-area illumination, emergency response

Cons

  • Significant bulk and weight make one-handed carry impractical for most users
  • Turbo mode thermally steps down over extended runs — max output is not indefinite

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Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you. Price shown ($699.99) reflects what we paid at time of purchase and may differ from current seller pricing.

Extended Observations

The MS32 hits 200,000 lumens and throws light 1,618 meters — numbers that hold up in the field, not just on a spec sheet. It's heavy and purpose-built, but if you need the brightest flashlight available, this is the one.

Let's get the weight on the table first: the MS32 is not a pocket light. It's a two-handed tool built around 32 CREE XHP70.2 LEDs, and it feels like one. If you're expecting something you'll clip to a belt loop, stop reading. This is a searchlight in handheld form, and IMALENT engineered it for people who actually need 200,000 lumens — search and rescue teams, large-site security, backcountry operators working in genuine darkness.

The output claim is real. I tested it on a clear night across an open field and confirmed beam reach well past the 1,600-meter spec. At full blast, the hotspot is tight enough to identify objects at distance — not just illuminate a vague glow. The beam profile is flood-biased enough to stay useful at closer ranges too, which matters when you're moving through terrain rather than standing still and scanning.

The active cooling system is what makes those numbers sustainable. A built-in fan kicks on at higher output levels and keeps the head from throttling down in the first few minutes like cheaper high-lumen lights do. Turbo mode isn't indefinite — thermal management will step down output over extended runs — but the sustained brightness window is longer than anything in this class I've handled. For emergency and rescue use, that window matters.

USB-C charging on a light this size is a smart call. The MS32 runs on a built-in battery pack, and the C-port means you're not hunting for a proprietary cable in the field. Charge times are long given the pack capacity, so plan accordingly — this isn't something you top off in an hour. Runtime on lower modes is genuinely useful; the light isn't a one-trick turbo machine.

The two cons worth naming: bulk and turbo duration. The MS32 is not a one-hand carry for most people, and sustained max output is thermally limited. Neither of these is a design failure — they're physics. But if you're buying this expecting a compact EDC that runs at full power indefinitely, recalibrate. Buy it because you need the reach and the output ceiling, and it will deliver both.

Our Verdict

The MS32 hits 200,000 lumens and throws light 1,618 meters — numbers that hold up in the field, not just on a spec sheet. It's heavy and purpose-built, but if you need the brightest flashlight available, this is the one.

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What customers are saying

12 reviews
Marcus R.
Marcus R.
5/5

This is an exceptional flashlight that delivers outstanding brightness without equal. The construction uses quality aluminum and protective glass, with an OLED display showing real-time data on output...

Derek H.
Derek H.
5/5

While an $800 flashlight with 200,000 lumens isn't strictly necessary, practicality isn't everything. I had an interesting experience where this light de-escalated a tense road rage situation. A man b...

James T.
James T.
5/5

As a truck driver working nights in unsafe areas, this flashlight exceeds expectations and truly converts darkness to daylight—no exaggeration, it must be experienced in person to appreciate. I damage...

Rachel K.
Rachel K.
5/5

The brightness is exceptional for nighttime urban exploration, illuminating entire areas with its wide beam spread without needing to reposition it to avoid blinding companions. Maximum brightness run...

Robert N.
Robert N.
1/5

After purchasing in October 2024, my experience has been deeply unsatisfactory. Despite minimal use—only 4-5 sessions of roughly an hour each—the unit failed during operation at 2000 lumens after 40 m...

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