The Beatbot Sora 70 is the robotic pool cleaner that finally closes the gap between what pool owners actually need and what the market has been offering. While traditional robots are tethered by cords and limited to floor and wall duty, the Sora 70 goes cordless and adds genuine surface skimming to the mix, a capability that typically doesn't show up until you're deep into the $2,000+ price bracket. Its 4-in-1 cleaning coverage (floors, walls, waterline, and surface), 6-liter filter basket, IP68 rating, and auto-park retrieval make it one of the most complete maintenance packages our team has tested. Toss it in the night before, let it run its 3-to-4 hour cycle, and pull it out of the water at the edge the next morning. That's the whole routine! At $1,349 with a 3-year warranty, pool owners paying weekly service fees can realistically break even in a single summer season, making the Sora 70 less of a luxury purchase and more of a straightforward financial decision.
The Cyberbike Charger R1 is a sub-$4,500 electric dirt bike that bucks the budget e-moto trend in the ways that actually matter. Where most bikes in this price range cut corners on suspension and geometry, the R1 shows up with Fast Ace forks up front, adjustable air suspension out back, and a sine wave vector controller that makes the power delivery feel premium well above its price point. At 130 lbs, it's nimble, it's well-finished out of the box, and it's backed by a brand with real customer support infrastructure, which is a rarer find in this space than it should be. It's not the fastest, the bottom-end torque leaves a little to be desired, and there are a handful of refinements Cyberbike should address in future runs... but as an all-around trail package, the R1 is a compelling buy for those seeking a quiet, easy to ride, comfortable electric dirt bike with great geometry.
The Extreme Wheel A1 establishes itself as the "power-for-dollar" leader in the mini e-moto category, delivering a 50 mph top speed and high-tier Samsung 50S cells for a $2,499 Minimum Advertised Price. Our field testing confirmed that its 72V system and 4,000W peak motor provide instantaneous throttle response and an impressive acceleration curve. While the A1 offers adult-friendly geometry with its 17-inch front and 16-inch rear tire setup, the budget-friendly price point results in notable technical compromises, including a cast metal frame unsuitable for major jumps and awkward swingarm-mounted footpegs. Additionally, the lack of a functional brake light and kickstand safety sensor are significant oversights for a machine with this much raw muscle. Ultimately, for riders who can overlook these ergonomic and safety trade-offs in favor of a nimble, high-speed "backyard ripper," the A1 represents an unbeatable performance investment in the current sub-$3,000 market.
The Velotric Tempo is one of the most unique lightweight city ebikes we’ve tested, combining an experience that feels natural with smart features such as Pulse Mode heart-rate training. In this review, we test the ride, tech, and real-world performance to see if this is the best lightweight commuter ebike you can buy right now.
The Aventon Current ADV is a heavy-hitting trail machine designed to shred, not just survive. With a massive 120Nm of torque from the Ultro X mid-drive and a rock-solid RockShox suspension, this bike turns the most intimidating climbs into your personal playground. It’s a masterclass in modern geometry, balancing a planted, stable feel on high-speed descents with enough "pop" to keep things playful on the tight stuff. If you're looking for high-end carbon performance and integrated tech without the $10,000 price tag, the Current ADV is ready to rip.
The Aventon Current eMTB might be the most disruptive electric mountain bike of the year. With premium components, advanced tech, and a surprisingly aggressive price, Aventon is challenging the traditional eMTB market in a big way.
The Lymow One is a tank tread robot mower with an aluminum alloy frame, dual rotary mulching blades spinning at 6,000 RPM, and a navigation stack combining RTK GPS and VSLAM, which is a fundamentally different machine from the plastic, razor-blade robots that dominate the category. In a week of real backyard testing it never got stuck, handled 45 degree slopes and 2 inch obstacles without issue, and cut clean stripes even on longer grass. The main criticisms are real: it is loud, heavy at 77.6 lbs, the proprietary blades require purchasing direct from Lymow, the physical display is nearly useless, and the easily accessible battery is a theft risk. For complex or demanding yards it is the most capable robot mower the team has tested; for flat, well-kept suburban lawns the trade-offs may outweigh the gains.
The Mammotion Luba Mini AWD is a compact robot mower built for smaller yards with real terrain challenges. A motor in every wheel, functional suspension, and an open cutting deck make it one of the more capable designs in the category. After six weeks of testing, the Freshly Charged team found it delivers on its core promise, but only for owners willing to put in the setup work. Auto-mapping needs improvement and the $29 dock cover should come in the box. For the right yard, it earns a recommendation from us.
The Yarbo is a modular autonomous yard robot that swaps between mower, snowblower, trimmer, and leaf blower attachments on a single base unit. Build quality is premium, the app is solid, and the snowblower attachment is a standout. The mowing performs well on large open lawns but struggles with cut quality in tight, obstacle-heavy areas. The bigger issue is the early-adopter tax: setup is complex, connectivity drops happen, and troubleshooting typically means forums rather than fast support. For large-yard owners who value their time and are comfortable with capable-but-still-maturing technology, it delivers. Everyone else may want to consider other options or wait for the rough edges to smooth out.
The Velotric Summit 2 is what happens when a brand stops trying to shout over the competition with marketing buzzwords and starts building a vehicle that actually solves real-world problems. This isn't just another generic hub-drive e-bike; it’s a refined, capable, and surprisingly intelligent machine that aims to bridge the gap between "commuter" and "off-road adventurer."
If you’re tired of the "e-bike dork" look and want something that performs like an extension of your own body rather than a clunky electric toy, keep reading.