The Roborock Robot Vacuum Review You Actually Need: A Real Human’s Take
The Story: How This Shiny Disk Saved My Sanity
How I Found It Picture this: It’s 3 AM, I’m Googling ‘robot vacuums that won’t die on carpet’ while nursing a cold coffee. My breaking point? Our golden retriever decided shedding season is year-round, and my toddler treats the floor like a crumb canvas. After dodging Dyson ads for weeks, YouTube algorithm gods blessed me with a Roborock demo video. Three Reddit AMAs and six ‘Eufy vs. Roborock’ comparison videos later, I pulled the trigger on the Roborock S7 MaxV Ultra.
Why I Bought It I needed something that could handle:
- Dog hair tumbleweeds
- Crackers crushed into rugs
- My hatred for mopping
- My lazier-than-Ikea-instructions personality
First Impressions Unboxing felt like Apple meets Swiss engineering. The vacuum itself? A sleek white puck that made my Roomba 680 look like a garage sale find. Setup took 10 minutes – basically just charging it and yelling ‘Hey Google, talk to Roborock!’ The app immediately showed a detailed map of my house that was scarily accurate. First test run? Watched it dodge a LEGO Death Star like Tom Cruise in Mission Impossible.
Real-Life Usage (AKA The Honeymoon Phase)
- Week 1: Obsessively checked cleaning reports like they were Instagram likes
- Month 2: Named it ‘Dusty Springfield’ and forgot where we keep the manual vacuum
- 6 Months In: Caught my husband having full conversations with it
The Experience: When Your Vacuum Becomes Family
Daily Use Cases Our schedule:
- 10 AM: Whole-house vacuum + mop (avoids toddler breakfast landmines)
- 3 PM: Kitchen zone clean (post PB&J apocalypse)
- Secret midnight ‘Bar Mode’ runs before guests come over
Notable Moments
- The time it detected and circled my forgotten tampon (bless its discrete app alert)
- When it successfully navigated my IKEA HOLMLUX throw rug that eats Roombas
- Discovering it mopped up spilled oat milk better than I would’ve
Unexpected Findings
- The mop pads self-clean better than my college dorm shower
- Emptying the dustbin feels weirdly satisfying (like popping bubble wrap)
- Creates accidental art with crumb patterns
Long-Term Thoughts After 8 months:
- Hard floors shine like my pre-kid days
- Dog hair anxiety reduced by 90%
- My therapist says I talk about the vacuum too much
Let’s Break It Down: The Good, The Bad, The ‘Meh’
Pros
✅ Lidar Navigation That Puts Tesla to Shame Maps rooms with NSA-level precision. Watched it learn our open-plan layout in 6 minutes flat.
✅ Suction Power for Cookie Monsters Handled embedded rug crumbs that survived three manual vacuum passes.
✅ Mop Game Stronger Than Mr. Clean Wet mopping feature erased toddler yogurt art I thought was permanent.
✅ App So Good It’s Creepy Create no-go zones over coffee. Check cleaning history from work. Diagnose errors in pajamas.
✅ Self-Emptying Base = Cheat Code Only touch the dustbin monthly. Life-changing for allergy sufferers.
✅ Quieter Than My Meditation App Can run during Zoom calls without sounding like a jet engine.
Cons
⚠️ The Price Tag Made Me Sweat Cost more than my first car. But spread over 5 years? $0.38/day for sanity.
⚠️ Mopping Pad Ballet Still have to hand-wash pads weekly. Pro tip: Buy 5 extras on Amazon.
⚠️ Occasional Dumbass Moments Got stuck trying to ‘clean’ a black rug it thought was a cliff. Fixed with a $5 ‘virtual wall’ tape.
Real Talk: Who Needs This (And Who Doesn’t)
Perfect For:
- Parents of crumb-generating tiny humans
- Pet owners fighting the furpocalypse
- Anyone with >50% hard floors
- Work-from-homers who want cleaning theater
Works Best When:
- You run daily maintenance cleans
- Furniture is at least 3” off the floor
- You actually empty the water tank
Creative Uses I’ve Found:
- Pre-cleaning before housekeepers come (no judgment)
- Finding lost earrings via the ‘cleaning report’
- Training kids to pick up toys (or watch them get eaten)
Money-Saving Tips:
- Buy refurbished directly from Roborock
- Use generic cleaning solutions (1:10 vinegar mix works)
- Skip the auto-empty base if you’re okay weekly bin duty
Hacks That Changed the Game:
- ‘Room Order’ feature → Clean bedrooms first, kitchen last
- Custom suction per room → carpets MAX, hardwood MIN
- Use Siri shortcuts to start cleaning when leaving home
The Bottom Line: Worth the Hype?
After 250+ cleans:
- Time Saved: ~3 hours/week → 7.5 DAYS/year
- Relationship Improved: No more ‘Did you vacuum?!’ fights
- Weird Bonus: Actually enjoy cleaning analytics
Buy If:
- You view cleaning as unpaid labor
- Want smart home bragging rights
- Have $750 you’d otherwise spend on Target impulse buys
Skip If:
- You live in a studio apartment
- Enjoy vacuuming as ‘therapy’
- Think Swiffers are high-tech
Final Verdict: 9/10 - The closest thing to a house elf you can legally own.
References
[1] Roborock S4 Max robot vacuum review - Tom’s Guide
[2] Roborock S6 MaxV robot vacuum review - Tom’s Guide
[3] Roborock Qrevo Slim mopping robot vacuum review
[4] Roborock Flexi Pro review: Combined vacuum cleaner …
[5] Roborock Saros Z70 at CES 2025: A huge flex | Mashable
[6] Roborock Q5 Pro robot vacuum review - Tech Advisor
[7] Roborock Qrevo Curv review: Smart and stylish | Tom’s Guide
[8] Roborock Saros 10R robot vacuum review: an ultra …
[9] Your experience with longevity/reliability of Roborocks?
[10] Roborock Qrevo Slim review - TechRadar
[11] Roborock Q Revo MaxV review - MSN
[12] Roborock S8 Pro Ultra Review: The Ultimate AI-Powered Robot …
[13] Review: Roborock Flexi Lite wet/dry power mop ain’t a …