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Comparison

Osaki OS-Highpointe 4D vs Synca CirC

Updated July 2026

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Quick Winner: Osaki OS-Highpointe 4D

Full-feature 4D versus small-space convenience: the Osaki wins decisively on massage quality, but the Synca wins the moment room size — not budget — is your real constraint.

Winner
Osaki OS-Highpointe 4D

Osaki

Osaki OS-Highpointe 4D

$4,999
7.9
Full report

Score comparison

Metric4DCirC
Performance9.07.0
Reliability8.07.0
Build Quality8.08.0
Warranty8.05.0
Serviceability6.06.0
Value8.08.0
Premium Justification8.07.0

Specifications

Osaki OS-Highpointe 4D

Massage type
4D, with adjustable speed and rhythm mid-stroke
Track
SL-track ("ultra-long extension," reaching from the base of the skull to the hamstrings)
Zero gravity
Yes, one position
Heat
6 zones, including lumbar, calf, and chest/stomach via a heated shawl
Airbags
44-cell full-body air compression
Body scan
Yes, computerized body scan
Programs
16 automatic + 5 manual modes, plus a "Chinese Medicine" preset
Warranty
5-year structural; 3-year in-home parts/service

Synca CirC

Massage type
Kneading, tapping, rolling, shiatsu (traditional multi-technique)
Track
SL-track
Zero gravity
Yes
Heat
Yes, heated
Airbags
Arms, legs, and feet compression (cell count unconfirmed)
Foot rollers
Yes
Dimensions/weight
21 in. wide x 37 in. tall footprint; ~70 lbs; fits users 4'9"–6'2", up to 250 lbs
Warranty
1-year comprehensive (in-home service, parts, frame)

The verdict

These two barely compete on paper, but buyers cross-shop them because both land near the affordable-premium line. The Osaki OS-Highpointe 4D (~$4,999) is simply the far better massage: true 4D rollers, an ultra-long SL-track, six heat zones, and a body scan versus the Synca's traditional multi-technique 3D-style massage. If massage quality is what you are buying, the Osaki wins comfortably. The Synca CirC (~$1,500) wins on the one axis the Osaki cannot touch: size. At 21 inches wide and 70 lbs it fits apartments and moves with one person, where the Osaki is a 350 lb fixture needing professional delivery. So this is not really "which is better" — it is "do you have the room." If you do, buy the Osaki; if you genuinely do not, the Synca is the honest, well-engineered way to still get a real massage chair.