Your smart home feels like a tech graveyard—mismatched apps, competing ecosystems, devices that barely acknowledge each other exist. Dreame Technology just threw down a gauntlet at CES 2026, unveiling an ambitious “All Dreams in One Dreame” vision that spans everything from ultra-thin robot vacuums to AI wearables, promising to solve fragmentation through sheer product breadth.
Robot Arms and Ultra-Thin Designs Push Cleaning Boundaries
Mechanical innovation replaces incremental suction upgrades in flagship models.
The centerpiece X60 Max Ultra Complete tackles furniture clearance with a 7.95cm profile—thin enough to slide under couches that trap most robots. Meanwhile, the Cyber10 Ultra introduces something genuinely novel: a multi-axis robotic arm that picks up obstacles weighing up to 1.1 pounds and swaps specialized cleaning tools autonomously.
According to Dreame, this represents the first consumer robot that manipulates environments rather than just navigating around problems. Think of it as the difference between a cautious driver and someone who moves traffic cones. The 35,000 Pa Vormax suction and 212°F ThermoHub mop cleaning hit expected flagship specs, but the mechanical ambition sets new category expectations.
Kitchen Appliances to AI Glasses Complete Ecosystem Play
Security systems and wearables signal Samsung-scale ambitions.
Dreame’s booth resembled a tech department store more than a vacuum company showcase. The VillaSmart Kitchen Series debuted professional-grade ranges and dishwashers, while AI Smart Wearables introduced rings, smart glasses, and watches designed to integrate with home systems. The NAVO Elite 1 OutCam earned Gearbrain’s CES Best Award in Security, validating Dreame’s expansion beyond cleaning.
The AIgoMart platform promises contextual intelligence—your security camera recognizing package deliveries while your vacuum automatically clears pathways. It’s ambitious enough to make Xiaomi nervous, assuming the software lives up to hardware variety.
CES Concepts vs. Shipping Reality Requires Scrutiny
Revolutionary claims need real-world testing beyond show floor demos.
Not everything announced ships immediately. The Cyber X stair-climbing concept platform remains demonstration-only, despite impressive 25cm step-climbing capabilities. Other products, like the H15 Pro Heat wet/dry vacuum and Nexus hair dryer, appear closer to retail availability.
Ana Wang, Dreame’s North America General Manager, positioned this as the company’s largest-ever CES presence, marking a definitive shift from cleaning specialist to ecosystem competitor. The question isn’t whether Dreame can build diverse hardware—it’s whether unified software makes buying everything from one company smarter than cherry-picking best-in-class individual products powered by AI.
The smart home wars just gained a mechanically ambitious new player. Your next upgrade decision got considerably more complex.




























