
A Chinese electronics brand called Dreame that’s best known for its intelligent home appliances, is expanding its nascent TV lineup with a couple of new, relatively high-end Mini-LED models. They’re interesting because they look fairly affordable, and they’ll be going on sale not only in China, but also Europe and the U.S. from next year.
The new TVs in question are the Dreame TV S100 and the Dreame TV V3000, and they were recently seen at IFA 2025 in Germany. The former is already listed on Dream’s website, while the latter is said to be on sale now in China. Both will be seen at CES 2026 ahead of a global launch planned for the first half of that year.
The Dreame TV S100 (pictured above and below) is a 4K Mini-LED TV that will be sold in sizes ranging from 55-inches to 96-inches, with a QLED+ display offering up to 1,000 nits brightness and 144Hz refresh rates and HDR support. It’s ideal for both TV watching and gaming, featuring a dedicated Game Console Mode for the latter use case and dedicated HDMI 2.1 ports. It’s powered by the Dreamind Pro AI Processor that intelligently upscales 2K content close to 4K while adapting color and clarity for natural, vivid images.

Perhaps the best thing about the Dreame S100 is the sound, for it comes with a fearsome integrated soundbar that boasts 11 drivers and 70-watts of total output, plus Dolby Atmos support. According to Dreame, it’ll create a 270° immersive soundstage.
As for the Dreame V3000 (below), this is said to be the company’s flagship model, with a 4K Mini-LED display that ranges in sizes from 55-inches to 100-inches. There’s no integrated soundbar this time, but it does feature the company’s Black Crystal True Colour Screen technology, which reflects just 1.8% of the ambient light. It cranks up the brightness to 2,800 nits, and best of all, it boasts a blazing-fast 300Hz refresh rate and dedicated gaming mode, making it an ideal purchase for console gamers.
Dreame said the V3000’s combination of QLED and Mini-LED enables it to deliver over one billion colours and 98% coverage of the DCI-P3 colour gamut, achieving ΔE≈0.7 colour accuracy. But gaming is where it really excels, with the 300Hz refresh rate and 5.3ms input lag supported by VRR, ALLM and AMD FreeSync Premium Pro.

On the other hand, the audio is less beefy, but it’s not bad by any means, with the Dreame Master Sound System bringing a 2.1-channel setup with Dolby Atmos. It has a dedicated subwoofer and the speakers feature a dual-horn design to create a 270° soundstage, so it should still feel pretty immersive, just less powerful than the S100.
There’s no word on a launch date or pricing just yet, but the company did confirm they will go on sale in Europe and the U.S. next year. That said, we hope they’ll be reasonably affordable. In China, the smallest 55-inch V3000 currently sells for 3,999 yuan (approximately £428), while the largest 100-inch model is priced at 14,499 yuan (around £1,551).
Given that the V3000 is said to be the flagship, it's reasonable to assume that the S100 will cost even less.