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I'm assuming you mean USB powerbanks.
I'd be surprised if there was such a device. It would require somewhat sophisticated electronics to work well, and the market for it would be small. A design that didn't result in power cutting off during the switchover would need to keep at least two powerbanks active at a time, and that could negatively impact efficiency since the electronics in the powerbank consume power when active even under light loads.
Or, I mean, it could just wire all the positives together and all the negatives together and hook that right into your target device.
It'd be the same output voltage regardless. A little less internal resistance, and lower step down in the later phases, but neither should make a difference in what you're powering.
Kinda like how there were those converters for the GameBoy back in the day that let you put C batteries into it. Same principle.
So I could actually get a couple of old short usb cords together cut the ends off, strip the positive and negative wires and hook them in series without it changing the output voltage?
The fact that you're having to ask means you shouldn't do it.
You need to take a minute to research before you burn your house down.