Baseus brings its X1 Pro AI dual-tracking security camera from Kickstarter to Amazon

Baseus is taking its X1 Pro security camera out of the crowdfunding bubble and into the mainstream. After a successful Kickstarter run, the smart AI dual-tracking outdoor camera is now available on Amazon, which is usually the real test of whether a gadget has legs beyond early adopters and hype-driven backers.

The X1 Pro did well on Kickstarter by any reasonable standard, pulling in more than $821,000 from over 2,800 backers. That kind of traction suggests real interest, not just curiosity. Baseus has also been busy collecting industry awards at shows like IFA 2025 and CES 2026, which helps build credibility, even if awards alone never guarantee a great real-world product.

What makes the X1 Pro stand out is its dual-camera setup. Instead of relying on a single wide lens, it uses two independent 3K cameras that can cover up to 300 degrees. The idea is simple enough. One camera does not have to do everything. Together, the cameras can track two different subjects at the same time and even hand off tracking duties between each other. On paper, that should mean fewer blind spots and less missed activity around larger outdoor spaces.

Each camera offers 3K resolution, an 8 meter detection range, and up to 8x digital zoom, with built-in spotlights to help at night. Specs like these are becoming more common in higher-end outdoor cameras, so the real question is not whether the hardware sounds good, but whether the software actually makes it useful without constant tweaking.

Baseus is leaning hard into AI to make the case. The company says the camera can distinguish between people, vehicles, pets, and faces, reducing the kind of false alerts that drive people to disable notifications altogether. That promise is appealing, though anyone who has used AI-based motion detection knows results can vary widely depending on lighting, placement, and environment.

One interesting touch is how the camera handles recorded footage. Instead of dumping everything into a long list of clips, the system automatically tags events and makes them searchable. In theory, that could save time when trying to find a specific incident, assuming the AI tagging holds up in real use.

X1 Pro AI b

Power is handled by a built-in battery paired with a sun-tracking solar panel. Baseus claims up to 150 days of operation, with just 20 minutes of sunlight needed for a full day of runtime. Those numbers always depend heavily on usage and weather, but solar-assisted security cameras are increasingly attractive for people who do not want to deal with frequent recharging.

The X1 Pro is designed for outdoor use, with an IP65 rating and support for temperatures ranging from minus 20 to 50 degrees Celsius. Footage is stored locally, with AES and RSA encryption, and Baseus emphasizes that there is no required cloud subscription. That last part matters, especially as more security camera makers push monthly fees as the default.

Now that the X1 Pro is on Amazon for $219.99 ($169.99 with clickable coupon), it moves from a controlled Kickstarter audience to a much broader and more critical one. Reviews from everyday buyers will matter more than awards or campaign totals. If the AI tracking works as advertised and the solar setup proves reliable, Baseus could have a solid entry in an increasingly crowded security camera market. If not, the Amazon reviews will make that clear pretty quickly.


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Brian Fagioli

Technology journalist and founder of NERDS.xyz

Brian Fagioli is a technology journalist and founder of NERDS.xyz. A former BetaNews writer, he has spent over a decade covering Linux, hardware, software, cybersecurity, and AI with a no nonsense approach for real nerds.

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