It simply ejects the object and moves on, never getting stuck.
Desde que un Roomba torpe apareció en Breaking Bad hace quince años, los aspiradores robóticos han recorrido un camino que refleja algo más amplio: la tendencia humana de delegar lo cotidiano a máquinas cada vez más capaces. El Dreame X60 Ultra Complete llega a Chile en 2026 como la expresión más avanzada de esa delegación, con 35.000 pascales de succión, visión artificial y una estación autónoma que lava, seca y vacía sin intervención humana. No es solo un electrodoméstico más potente; es una pregunta sobre cuánto del hogar estamos dispuestos a ceder a la inteligencia de las máquinas.
- El X60 Ultra Complete rompe la barrera de los 30.000 Pa en un mercado donde los modelos de alta gama apenas alcanzaban 8.000 Pa hace dos años, redefiniendo lo que se considera posible en limpieza robótica.
- En hogares con tres perros, un bebé gateando y el caos habitual, otros robots colisionan y quedan atrapados; este modelo recalcula su ruta en milisegundos y rodea obstáculos vivos con precisión casi delicada.
- La versión 'Complete' responde directamente a una frustración real del mercado chileno: la desaparición de repuestos de marcas chinas tras la compra, incluyendo un kit que sostiene un año y medio de uso intensivo.
- Con una estación base del tamaño de un pequeño refrigerador y un precio de $1.429.900 CLP, el robot exige tanto espacio físico como presupuesto, limitando su acceso a hogares grandes con necesidades específicas.
- La cámara integrada con cifrado militar y el altavoz incorporado convierten al aspirador en un dispositivo de monitoreo del hogar, ampliando su función más allá de la limpieza hacia la vigilancia remota.
Quince años después de que un Roomba torpe deambulara por la casa de Jesse Pinkman en Breaking Bad, los aspiradores robóticos han dejado de ser juguetes. El Dreame X60 Ultra Complete, llegado a Chile en 2026, es la prueba más contundente de esa transformación: el primer robot aspirador en superar los 30.000 pascales de succión, entregando 35.000 Pa en un mercado donde los modelos premium de hace dos años apenas alcanzaban 8.000 Pa.
La potencia bruta es solo el comienzo. El robot mide menos de ocho centímetros de altura, puede escalar obstáculos de hasta 8,8 centímetros, friega con agua tibia y cuenta con un sistema de visión artificial que combina LiDAR y cámaras RGB para reconocer cables, mascotas y bebés, navegando alrededor de ellos con una precisión que parece intuitiva. Su estación base lava los paños de fregado con agua a 100 grados, los seca con aire caliente y vacía el depósito de polvo de forma autónoma durante meses.
Una semana de prueba en un hogar real —tres perros, un bebé gateando, alfombras densas— confirmó lo que los números sugieren: donde otros robots quedan ciegos y colisionan, el X60 Ultra Complete recalcula su ruta en milisegundos, rodeando al perro dormido en el pasillo con una distancia casi considerada.
La versión 'Complete' también resuelve un problema concreto del mercado chileno: la dificultad de encontrar repuestos de marcas chinas tras la compra. El kit incluido —cepillos, filtros HEPA, paños, detergentes y bolsas— alcanza para un año y medio de uso intensivo sin recurrir a sitios internacionales.
Los límites son claros. El precio de $1.429.900 CLP lo ubica entre las opciones más caras del mercado, y la estación base exige un espacio permanente considerable. Para casas grandes con alfombras densas o mascotas que mudan pelo constantemente, opera en una categoría propia. Para el resto, la pregunta es si tanta capacidad justifica tanto costo.
Fifteen years have passed since a Roomba appeared on Breaking Bad, bumbling through Jesse Pinkman's house in a scene that defined robot vacuums for a generation. Back then, they were toys—clumsy discs that crashed into chair legs and got stuck on rugs. Today, in 2026, the technology has transformed so completely that calling them vacuums feels like calling a smartphone a telephone.
The Dreame X60 Ultra Complete arrived in Chile this year as something unprecedented: the first robot vacuum to break the 30,000 Pascal barrier. For context, a basic model pulls 4,000 Pa. High-end competitors two years ago maxed out around 8,000 Pa. This machine delivers 35,000 Pa—more raw suction power than many corded industrial vacuums. It's a number that sounds absurd until you watch it work on a dense carpet, pulling up dust that seemed invisible, buried under layers of fiber.
But raw power is only part of the story. The X60 Ultra Complete measures less than eight centimeters tall, allowing it to slide under beds and low furniture where most robots cannot reach. It can climb obstacles up to 8.8 centimeters high. It mops with warm water. Its base station washes the mop pads in 100-degree water, dries them with heated air, and automatically empties the dust bin into a bag that lasts for months. The robot itself uses AI-powered vision with LiDAR mapping and RGB cameras to recognize objects—a charging cable, a pet, a child—and navigate around them with what feels like human intuition. When it encounters something it cannot vacuum, it simply ejects the object and moves on, never getting stuck.
Testing it for a week in a real home with three dogs, a crawling baby, carpets, and the usual chaos of daily life revealed why this machine has set a new standard. Other robots go blind in complex environments and collide with obstacles. The X60 Ultra Complete recalculates its route in milliseconds. If a dog lies across the hallway, the robot detours around it with almost delicate precision, maintaining distance so as not to startle the animal. The same applies to toys, cables, and the other historical enemies of robot vacuums.
The "Complete" version addresses a real pain point in the Chilean market: Chinese brands often disappear from local retail after purchase, leaving owners unable to find replacement filters or mop pads. This model arrives with a generous kit—extra brushes, HEPA filters, multiple mop pairs, detergents, and dust bags—enough to sustain a year and a half of heavy use without hunting through international websites.
The integrated camera deserves mention. It allows real-time remote viewing through a smartphone app, so you can check if you left the stove on, speak to a pet through the robot's speaker, or record video clips. Dreame claims military-grade encryption, and the robot announces via voice assistant whenever the camera is active.
The drawbacks are straightforward. At 1,429,900 Chilean pesos, it ranks among the market's most expensive options. The base station requires dedicated floor space roughly the size of a small refrigerator and must stay plugged in. Neither obstacle is trivial for smaller homes.
But if you own a large house, have dense carpets, or live with pets that shed constantly, the X60 Ultra Complete operates in a category by itself. It is, without question, the most powerful robot vacuum available in Chile today. Whether that power justifies the price depends entirely on your home and your tolerance for delegating floor cleaning to a machine that actually works.
Notable Quotes
If you have a large house, dense carpets, or live with pets that shed constantly, the X60 Ultra Complete operates in a category by itself.— La Tercera review
Dreame currently leads the market in raw power among robot vacuums available in Chile.— La Tercera review
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does a robot vacuum need 35,000 Pa of suction when most people never had more than 8,000?
Because the market finally caught up to what dense carpets and pet hair actually demand. For tile or light floors, 8,000 is plenty. But if you have a golden retriever and Persian rugs, you're not cleaning—you're just moving dirt around.
The camera seems like overkill. Why would anyone need to watch their vacuum remotely?
It's not really about watching the vacuum. It's about having eyes in your home when you're not there. Check if the stove is on. See what the dog knocked over. Talk to your pet. The vacuum is just the vehicle.
Does it actually avoid obstacles, or does it just move slowly and carefully?
It genuinely avoids them. The AI recognizes what it's seeing and recalculates in milliseconds. I watched it navigate around a crawling baby without hesitation. That's not caution—that's intelligence.
What about the price? 1.43 million pesos is a lot of money for a vacuum.
It is. But the Complete kit includes a year and a half of spare parts, which solves a real problem in Chile where Chinese brands disappear after sale. You're not just buying a vacuum; you're buying peace of mind.
Who should actually buy this thing?
Large homes with carpets and pets. If you have tile floors and no animals, you're overpaying. But if you're drowning in pet hair and tired of vacuuming, this is the only machine that genuinely solves the problem.
Is it the best robot vacuum in the world, or just the best in Chile?
In Chile, it's unmatched. Globally, there are competitors, but none are available here. For the Chilean market, there's no rival.