The Kobra 3 is a CoreXY bedslinger in the same size class as the Bambu A1, priced $100 below it. The performance gap is narrower than the price gap suggests. For users printing PLA and PETG who don’t need Bambu’s ecosystem or AMS integration, the Kobra 3 is a legitimate alternative. For users who want multicolor or plan to print ABS/ASA seriously, the limitations of the open frame become the deciding factor.
What It Does Well
CoreXY at 600mm/s with a 250×250mm bed is competitive in this class. The direct drive extruder handles the material range expected at this price: PLA, PETG, TPU with reasonable results. LeviQ 3.0 leveling is reliable — consistent first layers without manual intervention.
The 250×250mm bed is a meaningful advantage over the 220×220mm machines. More build area means fewer part splits, less assembly of larger prints.
ACE Pro compatibility (sold separately) makes this printer upgradeable to multicolor if your priorities change. The hardware is the same as the Kobra 3 Combo — only the ACE Pro unit is absent.
Where It Falls Short
No enclosure makes ABS and ASA impractical. Warping on the open frame with these materials is consistent enough that you’ll need a DIY tent to get reliable results.
Anycubic’s community is smaller than Creality’s and significantly smaller than Bambu’s. Print profiles, troubleshooting resources, and modification guides are available but thinner than the competition.
At 600mm/s the Kobra 3 delivers good results only with proper input shaping calibration from the factory profile. Running significantly above 300mm/s on outer perimeters will produce ringing artifacts without tuning.
Materials
PLA and PLA+: Core use case. 215–220°C nozzle, 60°C bed. Good surface quality up to 300mm/s outer walls, faster infill.
PETG: 240–245°C nozzle, 70–75°C bed. Reduce fan to 30–50%. PETG bonds to PEI aggressively — apply a light PVA glue stick layer if you’re getting sheets stuck to the plate.
TPU (95A): Direct drive makes this manageable. 220°C, 25–30mm/s, retraction 0.5mm or off entirely.
ABS: Technically achievable with a DIY enclosure (cardboard box or acrylic panels). Without one, layer separation on parts taller than 50mm is likely.
vs. the Competition
Bambu A1 ($399): More polished software, mature ecosystem, AMS Lite compatible, 256mm build area. Pay the extra $100 if you want fewer setup headaches or plan to add multicolor.
Creality Ender 3 V3 ($199): Smaller 220mm bed, CoreXZ instead of CoreXY, half the price. The Kobra 3 is a meaningful step up in build size and motion system rigidity.
Anycubic Kobra X ($229): Same CoreXY architecture, 220mm bed, entry price. The Kobra 3 adds 30mm to each axis for $70 more.