Breville built a $2,000 machine to automate the fiddly parts of espresso, then shipped an auto-tamper that spins the puck and distributes unevenly, forcing you to manually stir and re-tamp anyway. The grinder insists on 22g doses when most recipes want 18g, the oversized bean hopper lets coffee go stale and jam the tamping mechanism, and software bugs trigger random reboots mid-shot. The espresso itself is excellent when you fight past all that, and the dual boiler with instant ThermoJet heat is genuinely impressive, but you're paying flagship money for automation that still demands manual fixes at every step. If you enjoy troubleshooting expensive gear, you'll get great coffee eventually; if you wanted one-button simplicity, the older Oracle Touch or a separate grinder will save you both money and frustration.
A straightforward super-automatic that makes good espresso and milk drinks without demanding barista skills or much counter space. The removable brew group means you can actually clean and service it yourself, and owners who descale on schedule report years of reliable use, but the Dinamica Plus variant has a persistent leak where the radiator meets the drip tray, pooling water under the front left corner until you add a silicone seal or elastic band yourself. Best for hands-on owners who value long-term serviceability over app connectivity and don't mind occasional DIY fixes; skip the Plus model entirely or budget time for that seal repair.