New updates have been reported about Anycubic.
Claim 30% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
Anycubic used RAPID+TCT 2026 in Boston to underscore its strategic push into higher-value desktop 3D printing workflows, centering its exhibit on multicolor FDM and large-format resin systems aimed at makers, studios, and advanced users. The company reported strong, sustained booth traffic, leveraging prior coverage from CNET, TechRadar, and Tom’s Hardware, which has emphasized improved usability, print reliability, and integrated multicolor capabilities across its portfolio.
At the entry-level, Anycubic positioned the Kobra X as a gateway multicolor FDM system by integrating four filament channels directly into the printhead, cutting the molten filament path to roughly 30 mm and, by its internal tests, reducing color-switching time and purge waste by 30–50%. In resin, the Photon P1 Max extends the Photon platform into larger-format work with an 18.3L build volume, a 14-inch 12K screen, a temperature-controlled 1.9L resin vat, and Wi-Fi/Ethernet connectivity with app-based monitoring for remote oversight.
For higher-end FDM workflows, the Kobra S1 Max Combo expands Anycubic’s multicolor ecosystem with a 350 × 350 × 350 mm³ build volume, a 65°C heated chamber, a 350°C hotend, and a 120°C heated bed, targeting engineering-grade materials such as PC, PA, ABS, and carbon-fiber composites. When paired with up to four ACE 2 Pro modules, the system supports up to 16-color printing and integrates filament drying and moisture management for longer, multi-material runs.
Anycubic also highlighted additional systems, including the Photon P1, Kobra S1 Combo, Kobra 4, and Kobra 3 Max Combo, to demonstrate breadth across both FDM and resin categories rather than isolated product launches. Collectively, the lineup signals a strategic emphasis on moving from hobbyist use toward more automated, material-flexible, and workflow-ready desktop solutions, potentially expanding Anycubic’s addressable market into prosumer studios, small-batch production, and engineering-focused users.
From an executive perspective, the RAPID+TCT showing reinforces Anycubic’s intent to compete on integrated multicolor architecture, build-volume expansion, and connectivity features that support distributed, remote-managed print environments. While no explicit financial guidance accompanied the event, the combination of media validation, high booth engagement, and a clearly tiered product stack suggests the company is positioning itself for deeper penetration into higher-margin segments of the desktop 3D printing market.

