- Dreame has announced that its mini-LED RGB TV is coming to the US.
- It has speakers that physically move to adjust the sound depending on where you are sitting.
- It was presented at Dreame Next in April 2026.
If you can say anything about Dreame, it’s that the smart home brand isn’t afraid to put moving robotic arms anywhere it can justify it, and that now extends to TVs with the Innix Aura Mini LED R8000F. This unique television made its US debut at Dreame Next in San Francisco and is planned to be available in the US in the future.
Instead of a grabber that pops out of the screen, the robotic element is Dreame’s first dynamic sound engine. This 6.2.2 channel audio setup features mechanical, extendable and rotating speakers that adapt to the viewer’s position (using AI to decide how to set the mode, naturally) to create the best sound experience.
So no matter where you sit in your living room, or even if you decide to get up and sit somewhere else mid-movie, Dreame says you should get outstanding sound performance with all the positional effects recreated perfectly for you.
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In addition to sound innovation, Dreame promises that the next-generation RGB mini-LED display can achieve incredible color accuracy, with the Dreamind Master AI processor optimizing images and audio in real time.
Now, we’ve already seen the impressive RGB mini-LED tech on other TVs, including Samsung’s world-first 130-inch version at CES and a great-looking demo from Panasonic, so the Dreame’s display is likely to be as visually stunning as those, depending on how well its processing works.
The big question is those robotic speakers.
While the Dreame Next had an R8000F TV for me to marvel at in the room, crowds and high, crowded ceilings are not acoustically ideal when it comes to getting an early impression of the TV’s sound. Nor were the vacuum cleaner sounds in the demo literally happening right in front of the screen.
But we do know that physically moving and rotating speakers around your space can improve audio performance, so the basic principle certainly holds. Tracking the user to improve sound quality through virtualized changes to the sound is a principle used in the LG Sound Suite Immersive Suite 7 Pro setup and as part of the Trueplay setting if you use a Sonos soundbar like the Sonos Arc Ultra, but they don’t actually do this. move the speakers.
It all depends on how effective the TV’s speaker movements are, how precise the smart AI adjustments are, and also how the speakers handle multiple viewers spread across the room and not just a single person.
We’ll also need to test the TV for ourselves to judge whether it compares to a proper surround sound setup and is good value for money, but we’re keen to give it a try.
Price and release date information is not yet available for the R8000F, but hopefully we will have this TV in our hands before the end of 2026.
In addition to the R8000F, Dreame gave us another look at its S100 TV.
The Aura mini LED display features “QLED+” technology to enhance your visual details, with its anti-glare, low-reflection black glass screen to help maintain visual clarity in bright conditions.
As for sound, while it doesn’t offer adjustable speakers like Dreame’s R8000F, the S100 apparently houses a 4.1.2-channel sound system built into the display.
It debuted at CES earlier this year and will arrive sometime before 2027 with a starting price of $1,299 (around £960 / AU$1,815) for its smallest 55-inch model.
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