Description
This 2-in-1 robot vacuum and mop is designed for pet owners who want a quiet, slim robot that can handle both hard floors and carpets without constant maintenance.
The 2300Pa suction and zero-tangle brush design lift pet hair and debris without weekly untangling, and the electric mopping with two water levels adapts to tile, laminate, or hardwood.
It works with voice commands via Google Assistant and its 2.87-inch slim profile lets it clean under beds and cabinets, achieving nearly full floor coverage.
One thing to note: for carpet cleaning, you need to manually remove the mop cloth to avoid wetting the carpet.
Buy Suggestion
[Verdict]
Skip this model. While the 2300Pa suction and zero-tangle brush design are genuinely useful for pet hair, the 100-minute runtime and the cartoony 76% off discount do not offset the lack of Alexa support and the manual mop-cloth removal required for carpets. This robot is best suited for a small apartment (under 1,300 sq. ft.) with hard floors and minimal carpet—and only if you prefer Google Assistant over Alexa.
[Spec analysis]
The 2.87-inch slim profile and 98% floor coverage claim are strong for low-clearance furniture, but the runtime-to-area ratio is tight: 100 minutes for 1,290 sq. ft. means it will likely recharge mid-cleaning in any home that size. The 60dB noise rating is quieter than typical corded stick vacuums, but not silent—worth noting for pet owners who clean while the baby naps. The zero-tangle brush addresses a real pain point of pet hair, but the instructions still recommend “removing hair from brush after every cleaning session,” which partially defeats the zero-tangle promise. The mopping function is basic: two water levels (low/high) and no auto-detection of carpets—you must manually remove the mopping pad before the robot enters a carpeted area, otherwise it will wet the carpet.
[Honest drawback]
The most notable limitation is the lack of Alexa support; if your smart home runs on Amazon devices, you lose voice control entirely. Additionally, the carpet-wetting issue is not a software bug but a design constraint—you have to remember to lift the mopping pad before each cleaning or risk damaging your rugs.
[Price take]
At $256.63, this is roughly on par with other mid-range robot vacs that offer 2300Pa suction and app scheduling—the 76% discount is a marketing gimmick against an inflated $899.99 MSRP, n
Skip this model. While the 2300Pa suction and zero-tangle brush design are genuinely useful for pet hair, the 100-minute runtime and the cartoony 76% off discount do not offset the lack of Alexa support and the manual mop-cloth removal required for carpets. This robot is best suited for a small apartment (under 1,300 sq. ft.) with hard floors and minimal carpet—and only if you prefer Google Assistant over Alexa.
[Spec analysis]
The 2.87-inch slim profile and 98% floor coverage claim are strong for low-clearance furniture, but the runtime-to-area ratio is tight: 100 minutes for 1,290 sq. ft. means it will likely recharge mid-cleaning in any home that size. The 60dB noise rating is quieter than typical corded stick vacuums, but not silent—worth noting for pet owners who clean while the baby naps. The zero-tangle brush addresses a real pain point of pet hair, but the instructions still recommend “removing hair from brush after every cleaning session,” which partially defeats the zero-tangle promise. The mopping function is basic: two water levels (low/high) and no auto-detection of carpets—you must manually remove the mopping pad before the robot enters a carpeted area, otherwise it will wet the carpet.
[Honest drawback]
The most notable limitation is the lack of Alexa support; if your smart home runs on Amazon devices, you lose voice control entirely. Additionally, the carpet-wetting issue is not a software bug but a design constraint—you have to remember to lift the mopping pad before each cleaning or risk damaging your rugs.
[Price take]
At $256.63, this is roughly on par with other mid-range robot vacs that offer 2300Pa suction and app scheduling—the 76% discount is a marketing gimmick against an inflated $899.99 MSRP, n