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If You Ever Dreamed Of A Cheap Bugatti Sedan, China Has You Covered

  • Dreame moved from vacuum cleaners into cars with three new brands.
  • Star Motor’s latest crossover-sedan concept borrows heavily from luxury icons.
  • Images show it sporting Rolls-Royce-style suicide doors with no B-pillar.

Just a few months ago, Dreame was a virtual unknown in the West, having primarily cut its teeth in China’s consumer electronics industry, making a name for itself with vacuum cleaners. The company has since pivoted hard into the automotive space, spinning up three separate car brands called Nebula Next, Kosmera, and Star Motors, each with its own stream of concepts. This is its latest creation.

The car appears to wear the badge of Star Motor, one of Dreame’s three new automotive sub-brands. It was introduced back in February with the T08 and T08L, a pair of boxy off-roaders that looked like carbon copies of Dongfeng’s M817 and M917. The brand also showed the D09, a luxury SUV that lifted heavily from the Rolls-Royce Cullinan playbook.

Read: The Chinese Vacuum Brand That Built A 1,973-HP Sedan Just Showed Up At Berkeley With It

As for this latest concept, it was present at the recent Beijing Auto Show and may make a return appearance at the Chengdu Auto Show in September in more production-ready form. Dreame has shown a penchant for taking inspiration from other brands’ designs, and this sedan appears no different. If the Bugatti Chiron and Ferrari Purosangue had a baby, it would look a lot like this.

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TychodeFeijter/X

The front of the crossover-style sedan features a massive grille that recalls the Kosmera concept Dreame trotted out at CES back in January, only scaled up and turned more aggressive. It also sports wide, gaping air intakes and a set of sharp LED headlights.

The standout feature in profile is the set of Rolls-Royce-style rear suicide doors, though Star Motor has pushed the idea further than Goodwood does. Where the Phantom retains a structural B-pillar between the front and rear doors, this Dreame concept deletes it entirely, leaving one uninterrupted opening when both doors swing wide. Recent spy shots show the upcoming Genesis GV90 adopting the same pillarless layout.

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Photos of the rear haven’t surfaced yet, but the C-shaped element wrapping the rear side windows and rear doors definitely looks reminiscent of the signature C-line used by Bugatti.

No details have emerged on the powertrain, assuming there’s even a working one under the sheetmetal, but in all likelihood, it will follow the lead of Dreame’s other concepts and run on pure electric power.

Whether any of these showcars will actually reach production remains anyone’s guess. Dreame has so far traded entirely in show cars and renderings.

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Dreame Nebula Next Jet Concept

The Brand Behind Your Robot Vacuum Strapped Rockets To Its EV Claiming 0-62 In 0.9 Seconds

  • Dreame unveiled a concept EV with jet power at an event in Silicon Valley.
  • Rocket-assisted sedan promises 0-100 kmh (62 mph) in less than a second.
  • Concept also features solid state batteries and Lidar that works at 600 m.

Chinese consumer electronics brand turned carmaker Dreame hasn’t even delivered its first vehicle, but it’s already talking about what comes next, and it might have rockets attached.

Dreame unveiled the Nebula NEXT 01 JET Edition during the company’s DREAME NEXT event in San Francisco, and yes it looks just like the Nebula Next 01X EV we’ve reported on before, and which is earmarked for sale in 2027.

Also: The Chinese Vacuum Brand That Built A 1,973-HP Sedan Just Showed Up At Berkeley With It

But compared with the production supercar-shaped four-door sedan, this one looks rather different at the rear. That’s where you’ll find a pair of rocket boosters that give the concept a claimed 0-62 mph (100 kmh) time of just 0.9 seconds.

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Dreame says the concept, which explores where the company’s car development could go in future, represents more than a decade of development in autonomous systems, motors, AI, and robotics. It also represents someone in marketing being allowed unsupervised access to caffeine and hallucinogenics.

Twin Jets

The headline feature is that custom dual solid-fuel rocket setup mounted to assist acceleration. Dreame claims the system reacts in 150 milliseconds and produces up to 100 kN of thrust. But there’s plenty of other modern or futuristic tech onboard that isn’t just concept nonsense, including steer- and brake-by-wire, and solid-state batteries with an energy density above 450 Wh/kg that Dreame says is nearing production readiness.

For ADAS duties, the company introduced its DHX1 LiDAR unit. Dreame says it can detect objects from up to 600 m (1,970 ft) away, Autohome reports, and deliver detail clarity rather than traditional rough outlines of obstacles. The plan includes advanced assisted L2+ driving and eventually more advanced L3 autonomy.

Inside, the car is intended to act as a rolling smart-home hub. Dreame’s AI assistant is designed to connect with robots, appliances, and other devices, turning the vehicle into a mobile command center for your gadgets. Perhaps surprisingly for a car from a brand famous for its vacuum cleaner and robot window washers, the car isn’t capable of washing itself.

Dreame says vehicle manufacturing begins in 2027, but don’t expect rockets to be part of the specification when those first cars hit the road.

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Dreame

The Chinese Vacuum Brand That Built A 1,973-HP Sedan Just Showed Up At Berkeley With It

  • Dreame teased an apparent partnership with leading UC Berkeley researchers.
  • A recent meeting centered on autonomous tech and core modern AI systems.
  • The company may share further details at a public event later this month.

Dreame Nebula Next Auto is looking to make a splash in the United States and they’re hosting an event in San Francisco later this month. However, they’re not stopping there as the company has “deepened its engagement with leading academic institutions.”

The vacuum giant turned automaker pointed to a recent event at the University of California, Berkeley suggesting it could help accelerate the “development of AI-defined vehicles and next-generation autonomous systems.” As part of the “engagement,” engineers met with Berkeley researchers specializing in autonomous control systems, intelligent transportation, and artificial intelligence.

More: Chinese Vacuum Brand Drops A Taycan-Trampling Concept At CES

The group discussed “translating advanced research into real-world vehicle systems, with particular emphasis on safety, control and full-stack AI integration.” However, it remains unclear if this was a one-off event or part of a deeper collaboration.

The company implied it’s the latter as they said the “visit forms part of a broader strategy to anchor Nebula Next’s development in deep technical collaboration. By working closely with academic experts, the company is strengthening its approach to autonomous driving, vehicle intelligence and system-level engineering.”

 The Chinese Vacuum Brand That Built A 1,973-HP Sedan Just Showed Up At Berkeley With It

Dreame is best-known for vacuums and pool cleaners, but the company showcased the Nebula Next 01 concept at CES. Billed as a “four-door electric hyper-sedan,” the firm claimed the model had over 1,973 hp (1,471 kW / 2,000 PS) and could accelerate from 0-62 mph (0-100 km/h) in 1.8 seconds.

While the Chinese company botched the introduction in January, it appears they brought the concept to the Berkley campus as a few pictures surfaced online. That detail suggests the event might have been more show than anything else.

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