In an attempt to simplify the various details of the cost-benefit calculations here:
If you spend:
1-2 hours on this chair per day: Might be worth spending some time shopping for a decent seat at Staples, but once you find something that fits and feels comfortable (with some warnings to take in consideration), pretty much go with that. You should find something below 100$ for sure, and can probably get away with <60$ spent if you get good sales.
3-4 hours / day: If you’re shopping at Staples, be more careful and check the engineering of the chair if you’ve got any knowledge there. Stuff below 60$ will probably break down and bend and become all other sorts of uncomfortable after a few months of use. If your body mass is high, you might need to go for solidity over comfort, or accept the unfair hand you’re dealt and spend more than 150$ for something that mixes enough comfort, ergonomy and solid reliability.
More than 4 hours / day on average: This is where the gains become nonlinear, and you will want to seriously test and examine anything you’re buying under 150$. At this point, you need to consider ergonomics, long-term comfort (which can’t be reliably “tested in store” at all, IME), reliability, a very solid frame for extended use that can handle the body’s natural jiggling and squirming without deforming itself (this includes checking the “frame” itself, but also any cushions, since those can “deflate” very rapidly if the manufacturer skimped there, and therefore become hard and just as uncomfortable as a bent chair), and so on. At this point, the same advice applies as shopping for mattresses, work boots, or any other sort of tool that you’re using all day every day. It’s only at this point where the differences between more relaxed postures, “work” postures and “gaming” postures starts really mattering, and I’d say if you actually spend 6-8 hours per day on average on this chair, you definitely want to go for the best you can get. How much that needs to cost, unfortunately, isn’t a known quantity; it depends very heavily on your body size, shape, mass, leg/torso ratio, how you normally move and a bunch of other things… so there’s a lot of hit-and-miss, unfortunately, unless you have access to the services of a professional in office ergonomics. Even then, I can’t myself speak for how much a professional would help.
In an attempt to simplify the various details of the cost-benefit calculations here:
If you spend:
1-2 hours on this chair per day: Might be worth spending some time shopping for a decent seat at Staples, but once you find something that fits and feels comfortable (with some warnings to take in consideration), pretty much go with that. You should find something below 100$ for sure, and can probably get away with <60$ spent if you get good sales.
3-4 hours / day: If you’re shopping at Staples, be more careful and check the engineering of the chair if you’ve got any knowledge there. Stuff below 60$ will probably break down and bend and become all other sorts of uncomfortable after a few months of use. If your body mass is high, you might need to go for solidity over comfort, or accept the unfair hand you’re dealt and spend more than 150$ for something that mixes enough comfort, ergonomy and solid reliability.
More than 4 hours / day on average: This is where the gains become nonlinear, and you will want to seriously test and examine anything you’re buying under 150$. At this point, you need to consider ergonomics, long-term comfort (which can’t be reliably “tested in store” at all, IME), reliability, a very solid frame for extended use that can handle the body’s natural jiggling and squirming without deforming itself (this includes checking the “frame” itself, but also any cushions, since those can “deflate” very rapidly if the manufacturer skimped there, and therefore become hard and just as uncomfortable as a bent chair), and so on. At this point, the same advice applies as shopping for mattresses, work boots, or any other sort of tool that you’re using all day every day. It’s only at this point where the differences between more relaxed postures, “work” postures and “gaming” postures starts really mattering, and I’d say if you actually spend 6-8 hours per day on average on this chair, you definitely want to go for the best you can get. How much that needs to cost, unfortunately, isn’t a known quantity; it depends very heavily on your body size, shape, mass, leg/torso ratio, how you normally move and a bunch of other things… so there’s a lot of hit-and-miss, unfortunately, unless you have access to the services of a professional in office ergonomics. Even then, I can’t myself speak for how much a professional would help.