The legitimate child of the Saros 10 and Curv

When I got my hands on the Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro, the feeling was clear: someone at Roborock took the DNA of the Saros 10, the one with Formula 1–level navigation, and shook it together with the more compact and sporty body of the Curv line.
Result? A robot that seems to say: “I may not wear the silk jacket of the Saros, but I clean like I’m doing an X-ray of your floor.”
Materials and Aesthetics: less fashion, more substance
In terms of build, the Curv 2 Pro confirms the philosophy of the Curv line, not trying to impress like the Saros series, but with a solid perceived quality, consistent with its price bracket and built to last. The shell is compact, well-finished, with a sober but modern design. The rounded base is well integrated: clean lines, thick plastics, and a neutral color scheme that fits well in contemporary homes. It is not a décor item like the Saros 10, but it has a more pragmatic identity, making it perfect for minimalistic or tech-style interiors. It’s a product that doesn’t pretend to be “luxury”: no techy lines or frosted glass, but it inspires trust, the kind of solidity that makes you feel you can let it work without thinking twice. And that, honestly, is a different kind of luxury.


Suction and Anti-Tangle System: DuoDivide + FlexiArm
The 25,000 Pa of the Curv 2 Pro are not brochure numbers: they come from the HyperForce system with concentrated airflow and a narrow throat duct that increases air speed exactly where needed, under the brush. The vacuum is not wasted but channeled to the floor like a targeted jet, which is why it easily lifts fine dust and debris even from grout lines.
DuoDivide uses two counter-rotating arms that collect hair from both sides and funnel it into the center, where a speed differential literally “rips” them away. Then the airflow sucks them in, preventing buildup.
FlexiArm, with its asymmetric arc shape and longer bristles, reaches into gaps and corners without tangling. The soft rubber barrier prevents hair from wrapping, while centrifugal force pushes them toward the center of the brush.
It’s worth noting that unlike the Saros, on the Curv 2 Pro the side brush is not auto-lifting, so in scenarios where it would be useful, the robot compensates via software logic rather than mechanics.
Together, they handle strands up to 40 cm in length, if someone in the house has long hair, this robot will be their new best friend.

Mopping performance, adaptation and strength
One of the most underrated features of the Curv 2 Pro is its ability to adjust its mechanical setup based on the task: when it needs to vacuum only, it can leave the mops directly at the base, preventing any accidental wetting of surfaces; when switching to mopping mode it lowers the pads and isolates the suction duct to avoid lifting wet debris; while on carpets it lifts everything and vacuums at full power without wetting fibres or rugs. It’s not a “visual transformation” gimmick but a smart asset management approach that uses each component only when needed, without human intervention.
On the washing performance front, the results are excellent: the use of water heated by the base up to 60 °C softens the dirt, while the 12 N of pressure and the 200 rpm rotation ensure constant and aggressive contact on dried stains. To be clear, you will hardly feel the mops “hot” when they touch a cold floor, but the superior washing quality compared to previous models makes it clear that the whole system together works.



Hygiene+ 3.0 Base: the robot’s wellness center
Here Roborock made a notable leap from the previous Curv. The new Dock Hygiene+ 3.0 is a five-star service station:
Washes mops with water up to 100 °C, eliminating 99.99% of bacteria.
Dries with 55 °C hot air to prevent mold and odors.
Automatically detects dirt via Intelligent Dirt Detection and, if needed, triggers Re-Wash or Re-Mop cycles for dirtier zones.
Introduces Mop-Soaking mode, soaking pads to soften tough dirt before washing.
Keeps the dust bag dry with Fresh-Air Drying and refills the robot’s tank with hot water.
The new one-piece, fully removable wash plate is also a plus for those who occasionally like a deep manual clean.
What’s missing is auto-detergent dosing: detergent must be added manually into the tank. As with the non-lifting side brush and other small cuts versus Saros, remember that this is a slightly more economical tier than the ultra-premium lineup — the price gap has to show somewhere. That said, I don’t consider this a real drawback: adding detergent while refilling is a natural, simultaneous gesture with no real cost in time or effort. In short: more a rational compromise than a structural limitation.



Navigation: Saros brain inside a Curv body
Navigation is, without exaggeration, among the best on the market.
The RetractSense Navigation system combines retractable LiDAR, dToF sensors, and a top contact sensor to avoid bumps from suspended furniture or low shelves.
In practice, the robot knows when to “duck” and when to lift its head again, with Olympic precision: the mechanism is tested for over 10,000 retraction cycles, longer than many college friendships.
The new lateral VertiBeam sensors measure distance from edges and obstacles with a narrow laser beam, ensuring precise cleaning along skirting boards, furniture, and table legs without touching them.
The visual system with RGB camera and structured light now recognizes over 200 common objects, from cables to slippers to pet bowls.
Result: you can leave most things lying around, it will figure it out.
It builds detailed maps in minutes, distinguishes rooms, and recognizes up to three floors automatically.
Obstacle detection is excellent: cables, slippers, bottles, or pet bowls are usually avoided. Occasionally it’s fooled by very small or transparent objects (like film or a dark sock), but those are edge cases.
It’s like a driver who knows the city by heart: might miss a turn sometimes, but always knows where it’s going.



Carpets: finally without “wet anxiety”
A true novelty for the Curv line is the automatic mop-drop function at the base.
Before starting a cleaning cycle you can request the robot to drop the mops and focus only on vacuuming, useful if you have multiple carpets or tall rugs. You can also have it vacuum carpets first to avoid dragging dirt onto them via wheels.
During combined cleaning, the Curv 2 Pro lifts the mops automatically on low carpets to avoid wetting them and uses full suction power.
On thicker carpets, the AdaptiLift frame comes into play: the chassis lifts and the robot can vacuum carpets up to 3 cm thick.
In testing, this worked well; a small limitation remains on higher and denser carpets where, despite the 25,000 Pa, it can’t always fully remove deep-seated dust or hair, but that’s a tough challenge for any robot.
Overall, carpet handling is finally mature, intelligent, and stress-free, a clear quality leap for the Curv series.

SmartPlan 3.0 and Everyday Intelligence
The Curv 2 Pro now thinks about routine autonomously. With SmartPlan 3.0 it understands which rooms need combined cleaning and which need only vacuuming, optimizing time, energy, and noise.
A rarely noted aspect is that the Curv 2 Pro also “thinks with its body”: thanks to independent actuators it can selectively raise the chassis, mops, or main brush depending on surface or mode. This logic ensures the right mechanical setup at all times, no waste, no accidental wetting, no manual intervention.
From the main app screen you can monitor progress in real time and intervene for spot or temporary cleaning without interrupting the main cycle, practical for real lived-in homes, not the staged houses you see on Instagram.


Pet-Friendly Intelligence
One of the most “human” features Roborock has added: the Curv 2 Pro recognizes pets like dogs or cats and, upon detecting them, automatically stops the main brush and diverts the path to avoid scaring them.
Through the app you can enable:
Live video call to talk to your pet (yes, it actually works);
“Find My Pet” mode, which searches the house if you can’t locate them;
Pet Snaps, which takes adorable pictures when it meets your furry friend.
It’s a mix between robot and digital pet-sitter, with the right sensitivity not to roll over your cat’s tail.
Battery and Noise
The 6,400 mAh battery is on par with current flagships, but what stands out is how efficiently it’s used.
As tested, the Curv 2 Pro is one of the most balanced and efficient robots I’ve tried: it uses every milliampere with surgical logic, optimizing routes and minimizing waste.
Result: it covers over 200 m² (as indicated under minimal settings and depending on environment complexity) on a single cycle and has one of the best energy efficiencies on the market today.
Not only does it work long and well, it does so with excellent consumption control, rare for a robot with this power.
Noise is polite: in standard mode it stays around 55 dB, so it won’t interrupt conversations or movie time.
Hello Rocky & Smart Home
The “Hello Rocky” voice assistant now also works offline, allowing you to start cleaning, choose rooms, and adjust suction or water flow without touching your phone.
Commands like “Clean here”, “Vacuum”, or “Clean the kitchen” work instantly, and compatibility with Alexa, Google Home, and Siri remains.
Plus, thanks to the Matter protocol, the Curv 2 Pro integrates seamlessly into any smart ecosystem, HomeKit, Google Home, or a universal hub, always present, discreet, connected, and autonomous.



Final Verdict: the smartest (and toughest) Curv ever
The Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro is the perfect fusion of intelligence and pragmatism: it takes the brain of the Saros, puts it in a boosted Curv body, resulting in a more accessible yet equally capable robot.
It’s less “chic” but much more “real-life”: powerful, efficient, and ready to work without asking for attention.
Suction is among the best in its class, mopping is genuinely convincing, and carpet handling is finally safe thanks to mop-drop and AdaptiLift.
Navigation remains one of the most precise on the market, at a retail price of €1,299, it is one of the most solid and convincing robots you can buy at least at this late stage of 2025, especially if you find it on sale.
You forget it exists, and when you notice… the house is already clean.
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Wishing everyone a smart life.