User experience
In a daily apartment-cleaning routine, the G8000 Max makes the most sense when you want to press start and keep crumbs, dust, and pet hair from building up between deeper cleanings. The 5000Pa suction figure is strong for this class, and the practical result is a robot that is well suited to hard floors, short-pile rugs, and medium-pile carpet rather than one that only skims the surface. Its 2.99-inch body also matters more than it sounds on paper, because getting under beds and sofas is exactly where a robot earns its keep instead of duplicating what a stick vacuum already reaches.
In a pet-hair home, this model lands in the useful middle ground between cheap random-path bots and more expensive mapping machines. It is built for hard floors, tile, carpet, and rugs, and the recurring pattern here is simple: everyday mess is the target, not deep carpet revival. The 450 mL dustbin is decent for the category, but homes with shedding dogs or cats will still end up emptying it often, especially if the robot runs daily. That is the real maintenance tension here: it saves time on floor pickup, but it does not remove the chore of bin care.
For mixed-floor vacuuming and light mopping, the combo design is convenient because it can handle both jobs in one pass with a 300 mL water tank. The upside is less manual sweeping and a faster reset for kitchens, entryways, and hard-floor living areas. The limit is equally clear: this is maintenance mopping, not a substitute for a dedicated scrub on dried spills or sticky patches. If your floors mostly need dust control and a light wipe, it fits well. If you expect pressure, pad lifting, or smarter carpet protection, this is the wrong tier.
Setup and control are part of the reason this robot is easy to recommend to first-time buyers. App, remote, voice, and onboard button control give it more than one way to fit into a household, and up to 150 minutes of runtime in quiet mode is enough for many small to midsize homes before it heads back to charge. The flip side is that this is not the robot to buy for precise room logic. It handles everyday coverage, edge work, and zig-zag cleaning, but if your routine depends on detailed map editing, no-go zones by room, or a more hands-off dock system, you will feel the ceiling quickly.