User experience
In a daily apartment or small-house routine, this is the kind of robot that makes sense when you want to press start and let the map do the work instead of babysitting every pass. LiDAR navigation, editable room maps, virtual walls, and no-mop zones give it a more deliberate feel than entry-level random-navigation bots. That matters most in open layouts and under-bed cleaning, where a robot either moves with purpose or wastes time. The practical payoff is simple: it fits best when you want repeatable scheduled cleaning rather than occasional novelty use.
For pet hair and general dust, the D10 Plus lands in the convincing range. The 6000 Pa suction figure, floating rubber brush, and four suction levels line up with what you want from a maintenance cleaner, and the strongest real-world pattern is that it handles everyday debris, dust, and hair well enough to become part of the weekly routine. The catch is familiar for this category: larger stray objects and kid clutter can still cause trouble, and brush wear or tangles remain part of ownership if the floor is not picked up first. If your home has toys, fabric scraps, or similar debris, this robot works better as a disciplined cleaner than a miracle worker.
On mixed floors, the split personality shows up quickly. It can vacuum and mop in one run, and the app gives you useful control over water flow and no-mop zones, which is exactly what you want if you move between wood, tile, and carpet. But the mop is better understood as light maintenance wiping than deep floor washing. For kitchens, paw prints, and day-to-day film on hard floors, that can still be worthwhile. For dried stains or textured tile that needs real agitation, this is the wrong route.
The self-empty dock is the feature that most changes day-to-day ownership. A 4 L bag and the advertised up-to-90-day setup reduce one of the most annoying robot-vac chores, and the machine returns to dock automatically after cleaning. In a calmer home, that lowers friction in a meaningful way. In a busier home with pet hair, larger debris, or fuller room-by-room cleans, you still need to keep an eye on the bin, consumables, and occasional clogs. Add the 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi requirement and the mixed reliability record, and the buying decision becomes clear: this is a convenience-first robot for regular upkeep, not a zero-maintenance appliance.