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DREAME, the Robot Vacuum Company, Just Launched a Rocket Car and 20 Smart Home Products in One Week

San Francisco just witnessed something wild. Dreame Technology, the company you probably know from robot vacuums that actually work, took over the Palace of Fine Arts for four days and unveiled a product lineup so sprawling it felt like watching a tech conglomerate speedrun a decade of ambition. DREAME NEXT wasn’t a launch event. It was a statement of intent, wrapped in smoke and mirrors and one very literal rocket car.

The Nebula NEXT 01 JET Edition kicked things off on April 27th with dual solid-fuel rocket boosters delivering 0-to-100 km/h in 0.9 seconds. Sebastian Thrun showed up to co-present. Steve Wozniak appeared on day three for the smartphone launch. Dwyane Wade demoed cleaning tech on day two. But here’s the thing about this spectacle: buried underneath the celebrity cameos and rocket-powered stunts, Dreame actually showed off some genuinely clever engineering in the categories where they’ve already proven themselves.

Designer: DREAME

The X60 Pro Ultra Complete introduced Dreame’s second-generation Dual UltraExtend Arm, which is exactly what it sounds like: a robotic vacuum with extending appendages that reach into corners and edges. The mop extends 18 centimeters out from the body, the side brush goes 12 centimeters. The fan motor hits 42 kilopascals at 150,000 RPM, which is absurd suction for a robot this size. It climbs 10-centimeter steps, which means double-layer staircases are no longer a dealbreaker. The stereo vision obstacle avoidance keeps it from ramming into furniture, and the runtime is unlimited because it auto-docks and recharges. This addresses the single biggest frustration with robot vacuums: they miss spots. The extending arms mean actual edge-to-edge coverage without manual cleanup afterward.

The Aqua20 Pro Ultra Roller Complete takes a different approach to the same problem. Instead of extending arms, it brings 160-degree Celsius steam directly to the floor. The built-in steam generator reaches temperature in eight seconds, and the steam loosens dirt before the hot water mop follows through. It’s a multi-dimensional attack on kitchen grease and dried pet paw prints, the kind of stuck-on mess that normal robot mops just smear around. The combination of heat, water, and pressure means fewer passes and cleaner floors.

Then there’s the Aero Ultra Steam wet-dry vacuum, which introduces what Dreame calls a Tri-Force Cleaning Solution: 200-degree Celsius steam wash, 194-degree Fahrenheit hot water mopping, and targeted foam wash for pet odors. The suction hits 30 kilopascals, and the body is slim enough at 3.88 inches to slide under most furniture. The runtime goes up to 100 minutes. Wet-dry vacuums have always been finicky because you’re dealing with both dry debris and liquid spills in the same cleaning session, and the separation between air and water matters. Dreame’s using what they call AirHydro Separation technology, an air-shield system that keeps the airflow path isolated from the water recovery path. It means you can switch between vacuuming crumbs and mopping spills without clogging the motor or diluting suction.

The outdoor lineup got similar treatment. The A3 AWD roboticmower uses LiDAR and binocular AI vision for autonomous mapping with no perimeter wires. Four-wheel drive handles 5.5-centimeter obstacles and 80 percent slopes. The cutting height adjusts from 3 to 10 centimeters, and the EdgeMaster system gets within 5 centimeters of boundaries. The All-in Center is what makes this actually hands-off: the mower returns to the base for automatic charging, cleaning, and weatherproof storage. It handles rain, heat, and freezing temps without manual intervention. Most robotic mowers still require you to babysit the charging process or bring them indoors during bad weather. This one just docks and waits.

What Dreame is doing here comes down to three core technologies they’ve been refining since 2015: high-speed digital motors, intelligent algorithms, and bionic robotic arms. The motors hit 200,000 RPM in lab conditions and mass-produce at 160,000 RPM. That’s aerospace-grade engineering applied to household appliances. The robotic arm platform, which started in vacuums, now scales across dishwashers, range hoods, and air conditioners. The AI perception stack learns from 4.05 million datasets across 35 algorithm versions, enabling real-time object detection and scene understanding.

The guest list told the story. When Sebastian Thrun, Steve Wozniak, and Dwyane Wade show up for a cleaning appliance company’s launch event, you’re watching category boundaries dissolve. William Fong put it plainly during the opening forum: “Dreame has the foundational OS for reality.” Julie Zhuo noted that Dreame delivers the kind of freedom people actually want. Sebastian Thrun closed with this: “Dreame is positioned to move from AI software into the physical world.”

Whether refrigerators with hyperspectral sensors and smartphones with modular satellite attachments actually land remains to be seen. But the cleaning tech works because Dreame stayed focused on solving real problems: edges that don’t get cleaned, grease that doesn’t lift, lawns that require constant manual oversight. The rocket car got the headlines. The robot vacuums earned them.

The post DREAME, the Robot Vacuum Company, Just Launched a Rocket Car and 20 Smart Home Products in One Week first appeared on Yanko Design.

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