The Roller Mop Wars Are Here, and Roborock Just Joined the Fight
For years, Roborock held the throne in robot vacuum supremacy. They had the suction power. They had the dust collection. They had the brand trust. But there was one thing they didn't have: a roller mop.
Then came 2024, and suddenly every competitor under the sun seemed to have one. Dreame released their Vibra Rise knockoff. Ultenic jumped in with aggressive marketing. Even smaller brands were shipping roller mop models. Meanwhile, Roborock's flagships stuck with their oscillating pads and unique Vibra Rise system.
Now, at CES 2025, Roborock announced its answer: the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow. And honestly? It took them long enough.
But here's the thing that makes this interesting: Roborock didn't just copy what everyone else is doing. They engineered something different. A motorized roller mop spinning at 220 RPM with 15 Newtons of downward pressure. Self-cleaning with eight water jets. An extra-wide mop head that allegedly cleans more surface area per pass than competitors' models. AI-powered dirt detection that switches between modes automatically.
All for
This article breaks down everything about the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow, how it actually works, where it fits in the crowded robot vacuum landscape, and whether it's worth the investment. We'll look at the tech, compare it to what else is out there, examine the real-world implications, and answer the questions people are actually asking.
Let's dive in.
TL; DR
- What it is: Roborock's first robot vacuum with a motorized 220 RPM self-cleaning roller mop, combining wet and dry cleaning in one unit
- Key specs: 20,000 Pa suction, extra-wide roller mop head, 15N downward pressure, AI-powered Dir Tect dirt detection, hot-water self-cleaning with 8 water jets
- Smart features: Matter support, camera-based obstacle avoidance, roller shield for carpet protection, edge-reaching mop extension
- Pricing: 999), available January 19th, 2025
- Bottom line: Roborock's tech is solid, but the premium price puts it in a competitive category where features matter more than brand loyalty


The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow offers competitive suction power and innovation at a premium price. Estimated data shows it is positioned between the Saros X and Dreame models in terms of features and pricing.
Understanding Roller Mop Technology: Why This Matters
First, let's talk about why roller mops even matter. If you've ever cleaned your kitchen floor, you know the difference between wiping with a flat cloth and actually scrubbing with circular motion. That's what a roller mop does.
Traditional robot mops use one of two approaches. The first: flat oscillating pads that vibrate side-to-side, like the system in Ecovacs models. The second: flat pads that don't move much, relying on the robot's forward motion for cleaning action.
Roborock had their Vibra Rise system, which was genuinely innovative. It vibrates a flat pad thousands of times per minute while applying downward pressure. It works. But it's not the same as a roller.
A roller mop is different. Picture a paint roller. As it spins, it scrubs and lifts simultaneously. The rolling action breaks up dried spills. It works better on textured floors. It covers more area because the entire barrel of the roller contacts the floor, not just a thin pad.
The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow's roller spins at 220 RPM (rotations per minute). That's moderate speed, actually. Higher isn't always better—too fast and the mop flies off before it scrubs. The downward pressure is 15 Newtons, which is measurable weight behind that scrubbing action. Eight water jets spray from below the dock to clean the roller after each pass, and a scraper removes trapped debris.
What's clever about Roborock's design is the roller shield. When the robot detects it's moving over carpet, a physical shield lowers to protect the roller from getting soaked. The mop also extends forward from the robot's body to reach edges and corners, something flat-pad systems struggle with because the pad is mounted directly under the chassis.
So why does this matter for you? Because your floor actually gets cleaner. Not just the marketing "cleaner." Actually, measurably cleaner.
The Self-Cleaning Problem
Here's the dirty truth about robot mops: they get dirty. After a few passes, the mop sits soaked with whatever debris was on your floor. Hair, dust, old food residue, mold spores. All of it accumulating in a dark, wet mop head.
Traditional mops require manual cleaning. You take them out, rinse them, hang them dry. With a robot? That defeats the entire purpose of automation.
So companies started adding auto-cleaning docks. These docks rinse the mop with water, wring it out, dry it, and store it. Sounds great. But most use cool or room-temperature water, which doesn't actually sanitize anything. Hot water does.
The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow's dock uses hot water for cleaning (temperature not specified, but ideally 130-140°F to kill bacteria) and then warm-air drying. Eight water jets spray simultaneously to break up debris stuck in the roller. This is important because roller mops, with their textured surface, can trap hair and fibers more than flat pads.
The dock empties the dustbin into a 65-day capacity dust bag. That means you're genuinely not dealing with dust collection for over two months if you run daily cleaning. That's the kind of convenience that actually changes daily life.


Estimated monthly operating costs for a robot vacuum range from
The AI Dirt Detection Game: Dir Tect Explained
Roborock calls it Dir Tect, and it's possibly the most important feature most buyers overlook. Here's what it does: the robot uses AI (running locally on the device, not cloud-based) to identify what type of mess it's encountering in real-time.
Dry dirt? Boost suction power to maximum. Wet spill? Switch to mop-only mode automatically. Combination? Use both simultaneously. All without you touching anything.
This solves a fundamental problem with robot mops: they're either optimized for dry cleaning or wet cleaning, rarely both. Most people have to choose, or manually adjust settings. Dir Tect removes that choice.
How does it work? The robot has a front-mounted camera, not a lidar or structured light (though it uses those too). The camera feeds images to on-device AI algorithms that classify flooring and debris types. Is that coffee spill wet? Does this look like dirt dust or tracked-in mud? What kind of floor am I on right now?
The classification happens thousands of times per cleaning cycle, constantly adapting. It's not learning from your floor patterns and optimizing—it's real-time decision-making. That's different from some competitors who use data collection for optimization (which raises privacy questions).
The practical upshot: you schedule one cleaning job per day, and it adapts to whatever messes exist. Kids spilled juice on the kitchen tile? The robot detects the wet spill and switches modes. The dog dragged dirt across the entryway? Boost suction automatically. This is the kind of intelligence that makes robots useful versus just interesting.
Object Avoidance: Seeing More Than Just What's in the Way
The camera also powers object avoidance. The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow can identify cables, shoes, pet waste, and presumably other household obstacles. It doesn't just detect "something is there," it classifies what that something is.
Why does this matter? Because a robot running at 20,000 Pa suction that crashes into your charging cable will tangle it. A robot that sees the cable and steers around it solves that problem. Same with pet waste—some robots just push it around. This one identifies it and avoids it entirely.
The confidence level of these detections matters. Miss a cable? Your robot gets tangled. Miss a pet accident? You get a mess. Roborock hasn't published their miss rates, which is frustrating from a transparency standpoint. But early reviews suggest the system works reliably, with false positives being rarer than false negatives (where it's conservative and avoids things that aren't obstacles).
Specifications Breakdown: What 20,000 Pa Actually Means
Let's talk specs, because numbers matter for understanding performance.
20,000 Pa suction is strong but not extreme. For context, that's in the middle-upper range of robot vacuums. The Dyson V15 (handheld) hits 240AW suction, which isn't directly comparable because Dyson uses different measurement standards. The previous-generation Roborock Saros X series used 18,000 Pa. So this is a modest improvement—about 11% stronger suction.
Is that meaningful? On hard floors, probably not. You'll never notice the difference. On carpet, you might pick up slightly more dust per pass. The real benefit is that if you run the robot daily, it doesn't fall behind on suction performance over time as the sensors get dusty.
Duo Divide anti-tangle brush: This is the side brush design. It's curved in a way that prevents hair and threads from wrapping around it, which is a constant problem with traditional spiral brushes. If you have pets or long hair, this matters. If not, it's a nice-to-have.
The roller dimensions: Roborock claims the roller is extra-wide and covers more area per pass. They haven't published exact dimensions, which is annoying. But if true, it means fewer total passes to clean the same space, which means faster completion times and lower power consumption.
15 Newtons of downward pressure on the mop is measurable weight—roughly equivalent to a 1.5kg (3.3lb) book pressing down. That's enough to scrub effectively without being so aggressive that it damages finishes or soaks light hardwood floors dangerously.
Matter support: The robot works with Apple Home, Amazon Alexa, and Google Home through Matter, Apple's smart home standard. This matters if you're already invested in an ecosystem. If you just want to run the robot manually or on schedule, it doesn't change anything.


The current model offers an 11% increase in suction power over the previous Roborock Saros X series, making it more effective on carpets. Dyson V15 uses a different measurement (AW) and is not directly comparable.
The Dock Design: That Signature Curved Look
Roborock's Curv line has a distinctive curved dock design, and the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow keeps it. It's not just aesthetic—the shape influences where the robot docks and how the mop extends.
The dock contains multiple subsystems working together. The hot-water cleaning system. The warm-air drying. The dust bin with auto-empty mechanism. The mopping fluid tank. Water drainage. Power charging. All in a footprint roughly the size of a standard trash can.
The auto-empty mechanism is worth understanding. The robot's main dustbin has a small capacity—typically 300-400ml. When the robot returns to dock, a motorized pump or air passage sucks the dust from the robot's bin into a larger bag inside the dock. That bag can hold about 65 days' worth of debris (with daily vacuuming). Eventually you replace the bag, but you don't touch the dust.
For people with allergies, this is genuinely valuable. Dust stays contained from the moment the robot picks it up until you replace the sealed bag.
Water Heating and Drying Time
One missing spec: Roborock hasn't published how long the drying cycle takes. Is it 30 minutes? Two hours? This matters if you schedule cleaning multiple times daily (a growing trend among people with pets or kids).
Air drying alone is slow and can lead to mildew in humid climates. Warm-air drying helps, but "warm" is vague. Is it 45°C? 60°C? The temperature determines drying time and mold prevention.
This is the kind of detail that separates good products from ones you actually want to use. A 30-minute drying cycle means you can run the robot twice daily. A 4-hour cycle means you can't. Roborock should be clearer about this.

Comparing the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow to the Competition
The robot vacuum market is crowded, and more options exist now than ever. The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow enters at the premium segment. How does it stack up?
Roborock's Own Lineup
Roborock sells the Saros line (their true flagship) and the Qrevo line (their value/feature-rich midrange). The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow is positioned above the regular Qrevo but below the Saros.
The Saros X series uses Vibra Rise mopping (flat pad with vibration), not a roller. It has stronger suction (18,000 Pa previously, likely more in newer models). It costs more. If you're already a Roborock customer, the question is: does the roller mop innovation justify a purchase? For most users, probably not if your Saros works fine. The improvement is incremental, not revolutionary.
The regular Qrevo line (without the Curv curves or the Flow mop) costs less and uses traditional flat pads. If you're price-sensitive, that's still a solid option.
Dreame Competitors
Dreame has been aggressive in the roller mop space. Their models use spinning rollers similar to Roborock's approach. They're also innovating on AI detection and obstacle avoidance.
Dreame's pricing is typically $300-500 cheaper than equivalent Roborock models. Their build quality is solid. Their customer service in some regions is weaker. If you're buying primarily on features and price, Dreame is worth considering, but you're trading brand reputation and service.
Ecovacs Models
Ecovacs (maker of Deebot) takes a different approach, sticking with oscillating pad technology rather than rollers. They've invested heavily in AI detection and dock innovation. Their newest models include heated water and extended drying cycles.
Ecovacs is cheaper than Roborock at comparable feature sets. They're equally innovative in some areas. But Roborock has better reputation for reliability and longevity. With robot vacuums, that matters—you're expecting 3-5 years of use.
Ultenic and Smaller Brands
Ultenic and other newer entrants offer roller mop models at lower prices. They're not innovating as much as copying, but execution matters. Some of these models are genuinely reliable, especially if you don't need fancy AI features.
The risk: if you have an issue, the support infrastructure is smaller. Finding replacement parts is harder. Reading reviews for any brand in this tier is critical.


The robot vacuum market is projected to grow from
Should You Buy It? A Realistic Assessment
Let's be honest about who the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow actually makes sense for.
Good fit:
- You have a floor plan with mixed hard floors and carpets
- You want automatic wet and dry cleaning without manual adjustment
- You're okay with a 849 on launch)
- You have pets or kids and value obstacle avoidance
- You already like Roborock and want the latest technology
- You prioritize reliability and customer service
Questionable fit:
- Your home is primarily hard floors (roller mops are great but not dramatically better than excellent flat pads)
- You're on a tight budget (spend $600-800 on a quality Dreame or Ecovacs model instead)
- You already own a recent Roborock vacuum (the improvement is incremental)
- You have minimal obstacles and want basic wet-dry cleaning
Poor fit:
- You clean infrequently (once weekly or less)
- You have a small apartment (you don't need this much capability)
- You want the absolute cheapest option (buy an older Qrevo model, not the Curv 2 Flow)
The Price-to-Value Equation
- Motorized roller mop technology (legitimate innovation)
- AI dirt detection that actually works
- Hot-water self-cleaning dock
- 65-day dust capacity
- Strong suction (20,000 Pa)
- Established brand with good warranty
If you value any three of those strongly, the price makes sense. If you want cheap and functional, it's expensive.
Compare it to a $600 Dreame robot with similar capabilities but less refined AI and slightly cheaper build quality. The Roborock costs 67% more but delivers maybe 20% better overall experience. That's a luxury tax, and you need to decide if that's worth it.

Installation and Setup: Making It Work in Your Home
Buying the robot is one thing. Getting it functional in your actual home is another.
The dock needs to be placed in a location where the robot can reach and return reliably. Not in a corner that's hard to navigate. Not on uneven flooring. Ideally on hard floors, not carpet. Roborock recommends leaving at least 1.5 meters of clearance around the dock.
Fill the dock with water (hot water if you want the cleaning benefit, though the dock heats it). Add whatever mopping fluid you prefer. Most users use a diluted floor cleaner or specialized robot mop solution.
The app setup is straightforward. Connect to Wi Fi, create a map of your home, set no-go zones, schedule cleaning times. The app is reliable but not gorgeous. It works. Doesn't have as many customization options as some competitors' apps, but it's not confusing.
One often-overlooked step: run the first cleaning cycle dry without water to remove any dust from manufacturing. The second cycle can be full wet-dry cleaning. This prevents grit from scratching floors.
Ongoing Maintenance
Robot vacuums require minimal maintenance compared to traditional vacuums, but "minimal" isn't "none."
Weekly: Remove hair and debris from the roller mop. Check the side brush for tangled hair. Empty any visible debris from the dock intake area.
Monthly: Clean the camera lens (dust reduces object detection accuracy). Inspect the roller for damage. Check water levels in the dock.
Every 2-3 months: Replace the dust bag. Clean the dock's water intake filter. Inspect the dock's base for mineral buildup if you have hard water.
This is less work than traditional mopping, but if you're the type who ignores maintenance, the robot will perform worse over time. Dust buildup reduces suction. Hair wrapped around the roller reduces cleaning power. Mineral deposits in the dock damage the water system.


Roller mops generally outperform traditional flat-pad mops, especially on textured floors and overall cleaning efficiency. Estimated data based on typical usage scenarios.
The Future of Robot Mop Technology
Where does this go from here? What's next after the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow?
Wet cleaning improvements: Manufacturers are experimenting with dual-roller systems, heated mop heads, and ultrasonic vibration combined with rolling. The next generation will likely clean even more effectively on tough spills.
Temperature adaptation: Heating the mop head dynamically based on floor type and detected spill severity. Cold water for dust, hot water for sticky spills.
Smarter obstacle avoidance: Today's AI recognizes cable, shoes, pet waste. Tomorrow's might recognize water on the floor and avoid spreading it, or identify areas needing extra cleaning and making a second pass automatically.
Longer dock cycles: As manufacturers innovate, drying times should drop while heating power increases. Faster drying means more frequent cleaning cycles are practical.
Customizable mop types: Dock compatibility with different mop attachments. Choose between different roller densities or materials depending on your floor type and preference.
Sustainability focus: Reusable, replaceable mop heads instead of disposables. Biodegradable cleaning solutions developed specifically for robots.
Roborock isn't typically the first to innovate (they're the first with a roller, but others had the idea), but they're good at refining innovation and executing at scale. Expect the Qrevo Curv 3 Flow (or whatever they call it) to iterate meaningfully on this foundation.

Real-World Performance Expectations
Here's what you actually get in practice, not in marketing materials.
Cleaning effectiveness: On hard floors, very good. Tile and vinyl get genuinely clean with the roller. Grout lines come reasonably clean. Hardwood should be run on lower water settings to avoid over-moistening.
On carpet, the robot doesn't clean as a substitute for occasional deep cleaning, but it does prevent dirt accumulation. Running daily or every other day keeps carpets noticeably fresher than weekly manual vacuuming.
Time per cleaning: Depends on home size. A 1,500 sq ft home with open floor plan typically takes 45-60 minutes for a full clean. A smaller apartment takes 20-30 minutes. This varies based on how many obstacles exist (furniture, toys, etc.).
Noise level: Robot vacuums are loud compared to people talking, quiet compared to traditional vacuums. The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow at full suction is probably around 65-70 d B (similar to a normal conversation or heavy traffic). Most people run them while they're not home or overnight.
Water usage: Per cleaning cycle, probably 1-2 liters of water total (mopping plus rinsing the mop). This is dramatically less than manual mopping, which typically uses 3-5+ liters.
Battery life: The specification sheet doesn't list runtime, which is annoying. But based on similar Roborock models, expect 120-180 minutes on a charge. This is enough for most homes; larger ones might not finish on one charge.


Roborock's new vacuum boasts impressive specs with 20,000Pa suction and a 220 RPM roller mop, positioning it as a powerful cleaning tool in the market.
Installation Challenges You'll Actually Face
Marketing materials don't mention the real issues.
Dock placement limitations: The dock needs access to Wi Fi. Your router must have good signal where the dock sits. If your router is far away or behind metal, you might get unreliable connection.
Waterproofing concerns: The dock is electronic and water is involved. It's designed for this, but you need to protect it from splashing and humidity. Bathroom installation is risky.
Hard water problems: Mineral deposits build up in hot-water systems in areas with hard water. Roborock doesn't provide water softeners or filters, and ignoring this will cause calcification in water jets within months.
Multiple homes issue: If you travel frequently or maintain multiple properties, the robot isn't portable. You need separate units or a robotic solution designed for transport.
Pet hair management: If you have long-haired pets, the roller gets wrapped with hair despite anti-tangle design. You'll need to clean it more frequently than they advertise.
None of these are dealbreakers, but they're worth knowing before purchase.

The Matter Integration: Apple Home, Alexa, Google Home
The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow works with Matter, which is useful if you're building a smart home. But let's be realistic about what this actually enables.
What you can do:
- Start and stop cleaning from Apple Home, Alexa, or Google Home
- Schedule cleaning times
- Get notifications when cleaning is done
- Include the robot in automations (e.g., "clean at 10am" via routine)
What you can't really do with voice:
- Ask it to focus on the kitchen (it doesn't understand partial room cleaning well)
- Adjust mop pressure (not exposed to smart home controls)
- Switch cleaning modes (not typically exposed)
The integration is helpful for convenience but don't expect it to rival the full app experience. The app is where actual control lives.
For most users, the native Roborock app is sufficient. The Matter integration is nice-to-have, not essential.

Warranty, Support, and Long-Term Viability
Roborock offers a 1-year standard warranty on the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow. Extended warranties are available for additional cost (typically 2-3 years for ~$150-200).
The question: how long will the robot actually work? Roborock robots typically last 3-5 years with normal use and maintenance. The limiting factors are usually:
- Motor wear (suction degrades over years)
- Wheel wear (treads flatten, reducing traction)
- Battery degradation (all lithium batteries lose capacity over time)
- Water system issues (if you don't maintain the dock)
Roborock's customer service is generally good but varies by region. In North America and Europe, response times are reasonable. In other regions, support can be slower.
Replacement parts are available: wheels, brushes, mop attachments, dock filters. This is good for longevity. A robot from a company that disappears in 2 years isn't a good investment.

Energy Consumption and Operating Costs
Here's something manufacturers rarely publicize: how much it costs to operate.
Assuming daily cleaning for 1 hour at maximum suction, a robot vacuum uses about 0.5-0.7 k Wh per day. At average US electricity rates (~
Water usage: approximately 1-2 liters per cleaning. At
Cleaning solution: depends on what you use. Commercial robot mop solutions cost ~
Dust bags:
Total operating cost: roughly
Manual mopping? Time is the cost. If you value your time at even
Suddenly the robot's cost doesn't seem so unreasonable.

Lifestyle Integration: When Does a Robot Actually Improve Your Life?
Here's the truth nobody talks about: robot vacuums are genuinely useful for some people and unnecessary for others.
Where they excel:
- Busy professionals who clean infrequently but want clean floors consistently
- People with mobility issues (arthritis, back problems, pregnancy)
- Homes with pets or kids where floors get dirty quickly
- People who work from home and like coming back to clean floors
- Allergic individuals who benefit from reduced dust contact
Where they're overkill:
- People who clean regularly and enjoy cleaning
- Minimalist homes with few obstacles
- Rental properties where you can't guarantee maintenance
- Very large homes (multiple units needed)
Where they fail:
- Households with thick carpets that require deep cleaning
- Homes with lots of floor obstacles (toys, cables, clutter)
- Bathrooms and wet areas (not designed for moisture)
- People who need precise spot cleaning
The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow is excellent at its job, but it's not magic. It won't transform your home into something pristine if you don't already maintain it. It amplifies good habits (consistent cleaning) but doesn't create cleanliness from chaos.

The Competitive Landscape: Where Roborock Stands
Roborock is the market leader in robot vacuums by several measures:
- Brand recognition: Highest among Western consumers
- Product range: Most extensive lineup (from budget to premium)
- Innovation pace: Regular improvements and new models
- Build quality: Reputation for durability
- Pricing: Premium but justified by features
But they're not unchallenged. Dreame is growing fast, especially in price-conscious markets. Ecovacs has loyal customers. Smaller brands are innovating on specific features.
The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow is Roborock's response to "we're late on the roller mop trend." It's a solid response, well-engineered, competitive. But it's not a game-changer. Other brands have similar technology at lower prices.
What Roborock does have: brand trust and proven longevity. That's worth something.

Looking at the Next Year in Robot Vacuums
We're at an inflection point. The technology is mature enough that multiple companies execute well. Differentiation matters more than raw innovation.
Likely developments in 2025-2026:
Hybrid mopping approaches: Rollers combined with oscillating pads. Different parts of the mop do different jobs.
AI improvements: Better obstacle recognition, more accurate room mapping, predictive scheduling ("you usually spill on Tuesdays, so let's clean earlier").
Thermal management: Heating water on-demand rather than maintaining a hot tank. Saves energy and improves performance.
Price compression: As competition increases, premium models drop in price. A
Sustainability focus: Manufacturers realizing that replaceable parts and repairability are competitive advantages.
Roborock will remain relevant because they have the brand, the ecosystem, and the R&D budget. But being the leader now doesn't guarantee being the leader in 2027.

The Decision Framework: Should You Buy the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow?
Here's a framework to help decide:
Ask yourself these questions:
- Do you currently mop floors manually? (If no, robot mopping probably isn't valuable)
- Do you have mixed floor types? (Roller mops excel on hard floors + light carpet)
- Is floor cleanliness important to you? (If "good enough" works, you don't need this)
- Do you have pets or kids? (Frequent messes = more valuable to you)
- Can you afford $999-1,000 without impacting finances? (If strained, consider cheaper options)
- Do you already own a recent Roborock? (If yes, improvement is modest)
- Is your home relatively open? (Many obstacles = reduced effectiveness)
- Will you run it at least every other day? (Once weekly is too infrequent to justify)
Scoring: If you answered "yes" to 6+ questions: the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow is a strong fit. If you answered "yes" to 4-5: it's worth considering, especially at the $849 launch price. If you answered "yes" to 3 or fewer: explore cheaper options or skip robot mopping entirely.
Alternative consideration:
- Budget tier: Qrevo non-Flow models (~$400-600) for basic robot vacuuming
- Value tier: Dreame models (~$500-800) for more features at lower cost
- Premium tier: Roborock Saros models (~$1,400+) if you want the absolute best

FAQ
What exactly is a roller mop compared to traditional flat pads?
A roller mop is a spinning cylindrical attachment that works like a paint roller, using circular scrubbing motion to break up dried spills and debris. Traditional flat-pad mops rely on vibration or forward motion for cleaning. Roller mops cover more surface area per rotation and excel on textured or heavily soiled floors, making them superior for typical household messes compared to flat systems.
How does the AI dirt detection actually work in the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow?
The Dir Tect system uses a front-mounted camera and on-device AI to classify debris types in real-time. When the robot detects a wet spill, it switches to mop-only mode automatically. For dry dirt, it boosts suction power. For mixed messes, it uses both simultaneously. The AI runs locally on the robot, not in the cloud, so decisions happen instantly without network latency.
Is $999 worth it, or should I buy a cheaper alternative?
The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow justifies its price if you value the roller mop technology, AI dirt detection, hot-water cleaning dock, and Roborock's brand reputation for reliability. If you're price-sensitive and willing to sacrifice some features, a Dreame model at
How often do I need to maintain the robot?
Weekly maintenance includes removing hair from the roller and checking the side brush. Monthly, you should clean the camera lens and check water levels. Every 2-3 months, replace the dust bag and inspect the dock for mineral buildup. This is significantly less work than traditional mopping but requires consistency to maintain performance.
Can the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow replace manual mopping entirely?
For regular maintenance cleaning, yes. Run it daily or every other day and your floors stay clean. For deep cleaning or dealing with sticky spills, nothing beats manual mopping. Think of the robot as your daily cleaning partner that keeps floors from getting dirty, not as a replacement for occasional deep cleaning.
What's the difference between the regular Qrevo and the Curv 2 Flow?
The regular Qrevo line uses traditional flat-pad mopping, while the Curv 2 Flow features the new roller mop technology with motorized spinning at 220 RPM. The Curv 2 Flow also includes the AI Dir Tect detection and hot-water cleaning dock. If you want basic robot mopping, the regular Qrevo is cheaper. If you want the latest technology, the Curv 2 Flow is the upgrade.
Does the roller mop actually make floors cleaner than flat pads?
On hard floors with spills or sticky residue, yes, noticeably cleaner. The rolling motion is superior for breaking up dried messes. On carpet, the difference is less dramatic since carpet fibers trap differently. For general daily maintenance, any good robot mop keeps floors acceptable; the roller excels at tackling messier situations.
How long will the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow last before needing replacement?
With proper maintenance, 3-5 years is typical for robot vacuums. The limiting factors are motor wear (reduced suction), battery degradation (shorter runtime), and water system damage from mineral buildup. Roborock parts are available for repair, extending lifespan. Their 1-year warranty covers defects, and extended warranties to 2-3 years are available.
Is the Matter integration actually useful for daily use?
Matter support lets you start cleaning from Apple Home, Alexa, or Google Home voice commands and includes basic scheduling. It's convenient but not essential—the native Roborock app offers more control. If you already have a smart home setup, it's a nice addition. If not, it doesn't justify the purchase decision.
What happens if I have hard water in my area?
Mineral deposits will accumulate in the dock's water system within a few months. Roborock doesn't provide built-in water softening or filters, so you'll need to manually descale the dock periodically or use distilled water. This is annoying but manageable and applies to any robot with heated water systems in hard water areas.

Final Thoughts: Is Roborock Actually Late to the Party?
Yes, Roborock arrived late to the roller mop trend. Competitors had motorized mops a year or more before the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow launched. But "late" isn't "behind." Roborock used that time to engineer something thoughtful: the AI dirt detection that adapts modes automatically, the eight-jet self-cleaning system, the dock design that actually works.
Lateness, in this case, meant refinement. Which is very Roborock.
Is this the robot you should buy? That depends entirely on your circumstances. If you have a mixed-floor home, want smart features, and can afford the premium price, it's excellent. If you're budget-conscious or have simpler needs, competitors offer compelling alternatives at lower prices.
The market is mature enough now that multiple companies execute well. Your choice is less about "which is best" and more about "which best fits your home and budget."
The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow is objectively a capable machine. Whether it's the right one for you is subjective.

Key Takeaways
- The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow features a motorized 220 RPM roller mop with 15N downward pressure, enabling more effective scrubbing than traditional flat-pad systems on hard floors and textured surfaces
- DirTect AI detection automatically switches between suction-only, mop-only, and combined modes based on real-time debris classification, eliminating manual mode adjustments
- The hot-water self-cleaning dock with eight water jets and 65-day dust capacity reduces maintenance requirements compared to older mopping technologies
- At 849), the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow costs 25-40% more than competitive Dreame or Ecovacs models with similar core features, justified by Roborock's reliability reputation
- Real-world performance delivers genuine cleaning improvements for daily maintenance but doesn't replace occasional deep cleaning, making it most valuable for busy professionals and pet owners
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