Creality Falcon has launched the Falcon T1, a new 5-in-1 laser workstation that is aimed squarely at makers, small businesses, and anyone who wants to level up their gaming space.
- The Falcon T1 has five swappable laser modules
- It is built for speed, safety, and not needing five separate machines
- Level up your games room or man cave
The company is billing the Falcon T1 as the world’s first 5-in-1 laser workstation, with the desktop machine bringing five different laser tools into one fully enclosed unit. Rather than needing separate machines for different materials and jobs, users can swap between interchangeable modules depending on what they want to cut, engrave, mark, or ruin forever because they forgot to double-check the settings. That last bit is not in the press release, but anyone who has ever used a laser engraver knows the fear.
The Falcon T1 starts at $2,249 and is available now across the United States and Europe. Creality Falcon says the machine is designed to replace a multi-laser setup that could otherwise cost upward of $20,000 if bought as separate machines.
The Falcon T1 has five swappable laser modules
The Falcon T1 supports five modules: a 20W Fiber laser, a 60W MOPA laser, 20W and 40W Diode lasers, and a 5W UV laser. According to Creality Falcon, the modules can be swapped without tools in around 15 seconds.
Each one has a different use case. The 20W Fiber module is designed for deep engraving and color embossing on metals and hardwoods, while the 60W MOPA module is aimed at more professional color marking and deeper metal engraving across materials such as titanium, gold, silver, brass, copper, and iron.
The 20W and 40W Diode modules cover more familiar maker materials, including wood, acrylic, PU leather, MDF, ceramics, and bamboo. Creality Falcon says the 20W Diode can cut up to 8mm basswood and 6mm non-transparent acrylic. The 5W UV module, meanwhile, is intended for precise engraving on transparent materials such as glass, crystal, and acrylic, including internal crystal engravings.
It is built for speed, safety, and not needing five separate machines
The Falcon T1 uses a high-speed galvanometer system, with claimed line speeds of up to 10,000mm/s and processing accuracy at or below 0.01mm. Creality Falcon also says the UV module can reach displacement accuracy as fine as 0.001mm under the F130 field lens, which is the kind of spec that sounds absurd until you remember this thing is designed for genuinely tiny detail work.
The machine also includes an HD camera with automatic recalibration after module swaps, a 4.3-inch touchscreen, mobile app support, cloud storage, and compatibility with Falcon Design Space, LightBurn, and GRBL on Windows and macOS. Built-in AI tools are also included for auto-calibration, visual alignment, 3D relief generation, background removal, contour extraction, and smart fill.
Optional extras include the Falcon Conveyor TC1, a 4-in-1 rotary attachment, a knife-blade bed, and the AP1 Mini air purifier. These are aimed at batch production and engraving cylindrical or irregular objects.
On the safety front, Creality Falcon says the T1 carries Class 1 laser safety certification thanks to its fully enclosed, radiation-blocking design. It also includes a lid-open stop, emergency stop button, laser key lock, dual dynamic flame detection, and airflow monitoring. There is one important caveat: in open-cover use cases such as conveyor or rotary modes, the product is not Class 1 compliant, so protective equipment should be worn.
The Creality Falcon T1 is in stock now, with a 10% early-bird discount currently applying across all configurations. The 20W Diode, 40W Diode, and 20W Fiber modules are shipping now, while the 5W UV and 60W MOPA modules are listed as arriving soon.
Level up your games room or man cave
The T1 feels like the kind of machine that could quickly become dangerous in the hands of the Etsy crowd, in the best possible way. For makers who already produce game room signs, arcade-style plaques, tabletop accessories, controller stands, custom coasters, man cave nonsense, and the sort of laser-cut bits that sell suspiciously well at craft fairs and markets, the appeal is obvious. Being able to jump from wood and acrylic to metal, glass, leather, and crystal without changing machines opens the door to a much wider range of custom gaming and pop-culture-adjacent products.
Last Updated On: Jun 9, 2026 10:43 am CEST