Dreame Debuts Leaptic Cube: A Detachable 8K Action Camera Built for Adventure

Dreame has just introduced the Leaptic Cube, a new action camera built for creators who want flexibility without sacrificing image quality. The standout feature is its detachable 8K camera module, letting you film from angles and positions that are hard to pull off with a traditional all-in-one action cam.

At the heart of the removable module is a 50-megapixel 1/1.3-inch sensor, designed to capture detailed footage while handling challenging lighting. Dreame says it delivers up to 13.5 stops of dynamic range, which can help preserve highlights and shadow detail in scenes with strong contrast. The module pairs that sensor with an f/2.8 lens and an ultra-wide 155-degree field of view, aimed at capturing immersive action shots, travel footage, and wide landscape perspectives.

Because the Leaptic Cube’s camera can detach from its main body, it opens up more creative filming setups. Dreame claims the module can be used up to 30 meters (98 feet) away while sending video back over its ProSync wireless connection, with up to 90 minutes of transmission time. That could be useful for mounting the camera in places where it’s inconvenient to keep the full body attached, while still maintaining monitoring and control through the main unit.

The main body includes a 2.27-inch LCD touchscreen for framing, playback, and adjusting settings. When the camera is docked and filming either outward or toward the user, Dreame rates the battery life at up to 200 minutes, making it better suited for longer outings, extended vlog sessions, or day trips where frequent charging is a hassle.

Another major focus is AI-driven features. The Leaptic Cube includes a 4 nm AI CPU that powers tools such as AI natural beauty, scene optimization, subject tracking, and audio enhancement. In practical terms, this is meant to help the camera adapt to different environments, keep subjects in focus, and improve sound quality without forcing you to fine-tune everything manually.

For hands-free control, Dreame also adds Moko, an on-board AI voice assistant. The company says it can change settings and control the camera using spoken commands, even if the phrasing isn’t perfectly exact. Gesture controls are supported too, which can come in handy in noisy environments or when you’re wearing gear and don’t want to tap through menus.

On the storage side, you can save footage to built-in internal storage (available in 64GB or 128GB), and there’s also support for an optional microSD card up to 1TB. The Leaptic Cube can record in 10-bit P-Log format, which is especially appealing for anyone who color-grades their footage. With more color information retained, HDR videos can hold up better during editing and post-processing, which is often where action camera footage can fall apart if it’s overly compressed or limited in color depth.

Dreame hasn’t shared full availability and pricing details yet, but interested buyers can sign up for notifications through the official Leaptic site to stay updated.