Suggest to go with power strip boards,
the 4 ways are cheaper to buy than a single plug or socket or a 2 meter length cable,
and usually on sale or cheaper by the dozen, they meet electrical approvals (DIY check read FIRST!) and LEGAL.
'LEGAL' may mean nothing to many now, but the insurance company may not pay if something happens on the property, even if not power related, after seeing suss DIY cabling
Daisy chained 4 and 6 way power strips work great, each has a thermal cutout/reset,
and you can buy a multi switched power board as the Master,
for 4 or 6 strips that may be difficult to access (or tossed in the back)
In Australia a basic starter set up of four (x4) 4 way boards plus a single 4 way switched board is good for 12 to 16 devices (depending on the daisy chain or not layout),
and will cost just under $30 in total for quality brand name units.
Do the math guys, that's $2 per socket. You can't even buy "a single plug or socket or a 2 meter length cable" for that, much less a short extension cord.
I check new addition power board sockets for a good tight fit (no suss ~loosey~ "WTF" badged socket rattlers please) and check with a polarity/power point tester,
before I plug in gear,
and then toss the newly loaded board at the back to join the others...
I stay away from wanky 'surge protected' boards and or USB fitted rubbish.
Just straight plain power boards with an overload reset switch near the cord entry point (not squished into the male plug = another latest DDA 'dumbass design award' candidate
)
For those that need true constant surge protection and or USB, buy separate add ons/devices that actually WORK.
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FWIW: an upgrade to the four (x4) 4 way boards is to additionally buy an RCD/MCB cube (usually in an orange color) with 4 switched sockets as the MASTER Master, and for future adds.
This way you've got local RCD (GFCI) and MCB protection, and thermal cutout in each of the four power boards = win win win