Antigravity A1 Gets Its Biggest Discount Yet for Prime Day, But Is It Worth Your Money?
The Antigravity A1 drone is up to 25% off starting June 23. Before you add it to your cart, here's what you should actually know.
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·9 hours ago·6 min de leitura
Is a Prime Day drone deal ever as good as it looks?
That is the question worth asking before the Antigravity A1 sale kicks off on June 23, 2026, when Antigravity has confirmed its largest price reduction to date, running in tandem with Amazon Prime Day (June 23–26). The discount reaches up to 25% off the standard retail price. According to The Drone Girl, the deal is actually structured in a way that rewards buyers who move before the Prime Day window officially opens, which is worth understanding before you wait.
I want to be upfront about the limitations here: this piece is based on two consumer-facing sources and Antigravity's own promotional materials. There is no independent technical teardown of the A1 available at time of writing, and I have not handled the hardware myself. What follows is an attempt to give you a clearer picture of what this sale actually means, and what it does not.
The headline figure is 25% off. On a consumer drone in the $300–$600 range (the company has not publicly disclosed the A1's base MSRP in precise terms across all configurations), that translates to somewhere between $75 and $150 in savings, depending on which variant you are purchasing. That is not nothing.
The more interesting detail, and the one that most deal-aggregator coverage is glossing over, is the pre-Prime Day structure. The Drone Girl's reporting indicates that buyers who act before June 23 may access a deal that is effectively sweeter than the headline Prime Day discount. The mechanism appears to involve a stacked or early-access pricing tier, though the exact structure remains unclear from publicly available information. If you are seriously considering the A1, it is worth visiting Antigravity's product page directly rather than waiting for the Amazon listing to go live.
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Amazon Prime Day itself runs June 23–26, 2026. Historically, drone discounts during Prime Day have been among the deepest of the calendar year, a pattern The Drone Girl has tracked across multiple Prime Day cycles. This is genuinely consistent with broader consumer electronics pricing behavior: manufacturers use the event to clear inventory, acquire new customers, and generate review volume ahead of the back-to-school and holiday cycles.
It is worth noting that the Antigravity A1 sits in a crowded segment. Consumer camera drones in the sub-$500 bracket have proliferated considerably since DJI's Mini series normalized the form factor, and most competitors are, to be precise, iterating on a well-established design template rather than introducing anything architecturally novel.
I have not seen published flight-test data or independent sensor benchmarks for the A1 specifically. The company's marketing materials emphasize portability and camera quality, which is standard positioning for this category. Whether those claims hold up under controlled conditions is something I would want to see tested by someone with calibrated equipment and a consistent methodology, not just a consumer unboxing review.
What I can say is that Antigravity as a brand has been building presence in the prosumer and enthusiast segments. The Prime Day partnership suggests they have the distribution relationships and margin structure to participate in Amazon's promotional ecosystem, which typically requires meaningful volume commitments. That is a signal of a certain level of operational maturity, even if it tells us nothing about the hardware itself.
The sample of independent reviews available at this stage is small. I found limited third-party technical coverage of the A1 specifically, and none that I would describe as rigorous by the standards I would apply to, say, a peer-reviewed evaluation. That does not mean the drone is bad. It means the evidence base for strong claims in either direction is thin.
If you are in the market for a consumer drone and the A1 has been on your radar, the June 23 sale is a reasonable moment to buy. Twenty-five percent off a considered purchase is a real discount, and the pre-Prime Day pricing structure may make acting slightly earlier the smarter move, depending on how Antigravity has structured the tiers.
If you are trying to decide whether the A1 is the right drone for your use case, that is a harder question and one this article cannot fully answer. The honest position is that rigorous comparative data across the competitive set (which includes DJI's Mini 4 Pro, Autel's EVO Nano series, and several others in this bracket) is not something I can synthesize from the available sources. Consumer drone reviews tend to be impressionistic rather than systematic, and the A1 specifically has not accumulated the review volume that would let you average across a large sample and feel confident.
What I would actually want to see before making a strong recommendation is a controlled flight-time test under consistent wind conditions, a sensor comparison against at least two direct competitors at the same price point post-discount, and some clarity on the A1's obstacle avoidance system, if it has one, because that is a feature where the gap between marketing language and real-world performance is frequently wide.
I know I am being picky here, but that is sort of the point. A 25% discount is only compelling if the baseline product is worth buying at full price.
The Drone Girl has indicated it will monitor Prime Day deals in real time and update its coverage as listings go live. That is the most practical resource for tracking whether the A1 discount deepens further during the June 23–26 window, or whether other drones in the segment see comparable reductions that change the relative value calculation.
For buyers who are less price-sensitive and more specification-sensitive, it is probably worth waiting another quarter. The consumer drone market has been moving quickly, and several manufacturers have suggested new models in the sub-$500 range are in the pipeline for late 2026. Buying at a discount now versus buying a newer platform at full price in September is a trade-off that depends heavily on what you need the drone for today.
For everyone else, June 23 is a concrete date with a confirmed discount from a brand that appears to be investing in its market presence. That is more than you can say for most promotional cycles, which tend to be vague until the last moment. The pre-Prime Day early access angle is the genuinely interesting wrinkle here, and it is the detail most coverage has underplayed. If you are going to act, acting before the Amazon window opens may well be the better move, though the exact pricing mechanics are something you will need to verify directly with Antigravity before committing.
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