My Babiie MBCS75
From 76 cm/29.9 in, up to 150 cm/59.1 in (~15 months to 12 years).

Pros / Cons
Pros
- MBCS75 makes a clear budget case if your child is already past the rear-facing stage and you want one forward-facing harness-to-booster seat with ISOFIX and top tether.
- It is easier to defend than a cheap all-stage seat when you do not need newborn or rear-facing coverage any more, because the seat’s job is narrower and more appropriate to the stage.
Cons
- There is no rear-facing phase here, so it is the wrong buy unless you are genuinely beyond that earlier safety-first stage.
- It is still a value-led seat, so shell substance and overall refinement are simpler than on stronger-known harness-to-booster rivals.
Product Facts
- From Age
- 15 months
- Max Weight
- 36 kg/79.4 lb
- More Info
- Product page
- Price/Buy
- Check Price
My Babiie MBCS75 makes the most sense once the main decision is already settled: your child is genuinely beyond the rear-facing stage and you want one straightforward forward-facing seat that starts with a harness and later becomes a booster. That narrower brief is what makes it easier to defend than many cheap all-stage seats. If you want ISOFIX and top tether, but do not need newborn coverage any more, it is a cleaner value buy than pretending one seat should do absolutely everything.
The limitation is equally clear. This seat only makes sense if the timing is right. If you still need rear-facing, it is simply the wrong product. Even when the stage is right, this is still a budget-led seat, so the shell, finish, and overall substance are more basic than on stronger-known harness-to-booster options. It works best when the goal is sensible stage-appropriate value, not the most reassuring premium feel.