Antigravity A1 Infinity Bundle unboxing: what you get for $1,999


After months of teasers and buzz, I finally got my hands on the Antigravity A1 Infinity Bundle — and I unboxed the whole thing on camera so you can see exactly what $1,999 gets you.

If you’re not familiar with Antigravity, here’s the quick version: it’s essentially the drone division of Insta360, the company that dominates the 360 camera market. The A1 is their first drone, and it’s built around an 8K 360 camera system with mandatory FPV goggles and point-to-fly controls. It’s a fundamentally different approach than what we’re used to seeing from DJI and other drone manufacturers.

Watch the full Antigravity A1 unboxing here

What’s in the Antigravity A1 Infinity Bundle?

The Infinity Bundle is the top-tier package at $1,999, and it includes everything you need to fly plus some serious extras:

The Core Package:

  • A1 drone (249g with standard battery)
  • Vision Goggles with 2K live view
  • Grip controller with FreeMotion and FPV modes
  • Standard battery (24 minutes flight time)
  • High-capacity battery (39 minutes flight time)

Infinity Bundle Extras:

  • Additional batteries
  • Charging hub for multiple batteries
  • Premium carrying case
  • Extra props
  • Lens guards
  • ND filters

That 39-minute flight time with the high-capacity battery is genuinely impressive for a sub-250g drone. For comparison, the DJI Avata 2 maxes out at 23 minutes.

The new Antigravity A1 drone has a dual-lens system with 1/1.28-inch sensors capable of recording 8K at 30fps, 5.2K at 60fps, or 4K at 100fps—all in full 360 degrees.

The 360 camera advantage

What makes the A1 different from traditional FPV drones is the dual-lens 360 system. With 1/1.28-inch sensors (slightly larger than the Avata 2), it captures 8K at 30fps, 5.2K at 60fps, or 4K at 100fps — all in full 360 degrees.

The concept according to the Antigravity marketing materials is “fly first, frame later.” You capture everything around the drone, then decide your perspective in post-production. For content creators, that’s potentially game-changing. You’re not locked into one framing choice during the flight.

But it also means a different workflow — larger files and 360 editing software. This isn’t a quick-capture-and-post kind of drone (well, there is software that can make it that way, but that’s not really the point).

Point-to-fly: Gimmick or game-changer?

The Grip controller offers two modes. FreeMotion Mode lets you point where you want the drone to go—essentially point-to-fly. This isn’t entirely new (Yuneec tried something similar a decade ago with the Wizard), but Antigravity’s execution looks more refined.

The drone really does fly itself though, with automated flight modes including:

  • Sky Genie: One-tap maneuvers like orbits, spirals, and “comet” shots
  • Deep Track: Insta360’s proven subject tracking technology
  • Virtual Cockpit: Immersive overlays (like flying with a dragon)
  • Sky Path: Design, save, and execute automated flight routes

First impressions

I haven’t flown the A1 yet, so this isn’t a review. But initial impressions on build quality are positive. The drone feels well-engineered to hit that 249g mark without feeling cheap. The packaging is premium (very Apple-esque), and the component quality looks solid.

What I still need to test:

  • Flight stability in wind
  • Real-world obstacle avoidance performance
  • 360 stitching quality
  • Whether point-to-fly controls actually deliver on their promise
  • Image quality versus the Avata 2

That full review is coming soon, complete with flight tests and image comparisons.

The new Antigravity A1 drone. Photo by Sally French/The Drone Girl

Where to buy the Antigravity A1 drone

The Antigravity A1 is available now in three configurations:

You can purchase through the Antigravity Store, Best Buy, and other authorized retailers such as B&H Photo.

At $1,999, the Infinity Bundle is a significant investment — especially when the DJI Avata 2 starts at $999. You’re paying a premium for 360 capability, computational photography expertise from Insta360, and notably longer flight time.

I’m intrigued by Antigravity’s headset-first approach and the potential of 360 capture for drone content. But I need more flight time before I can tell you if this is genuinely innovative or just expensive experimentation.

Watch the full unboxing on my YouTube Channel to see every component up close, and stay tuned for the complete review where I’ll put this thing through its paces and answer whether it’s actually worth two grand.

What do you think? Is 360 drone capture the future, or is this solving a problem most people don’t have? Drop your thoughts in the comments below.

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