The Short Answer
Bambu Lab X2D

$649
My pick, base price
~10
Bambu models alone
$219+
Cheapest real option
2026
Pricing reflects

My Actual Pick: Bambu Lab X2D

If I were buying a printer today, knowing what I know from building props like the Maria’s Crown piece on this site, I would get the Bambu Lab X2D Combo for around $899. Not the biggest printer on the market, not the cheapest, and not the one with the flashiest feature list — but the one that solves the specific problem that causes the most wasted time and ruined prints for anyone doing detailed prop or cosplay work: supports.

The X2D launched in April 2026 as the direct replacement for the X1 Carbon, which Bambu officially discontinued the same month. It kept the same compact, enclosed footprint as the X1C but added something the X1C never had — a second nozzle, dedicated specifically to printing supports in a different, easily removable material. If you’ve ever spent twenty minutes with needle-nose pliers carefully working tree supports off a delicate arch or a thin decorative edge, hoping you don’t snap something in the process, this is the feature that actually changes how you approach a print, not just how fast it finishes.

Why this matters specifically for prop and cosplay work: Complex geometry — crowns, armour pieces, anything with overhangs and thin decorative elements — is exactly where single-nozzle supports cause the most damage during removal. A dedicated support nozzle means the interface between the support material and your actual model releases cleanly instead of tearing, which is the difference between a crisp finished edge and a rough one that needs sanding to fix.

The Full Case for the X2D

Price
$649 / $899
Base unit or Combo with AMS 2 Pro. Get the Combo — multicolor and dry filament storage are worth the extra cost.
Build Volume
256×256×260mm
Comfortably fits most prop and display work. Not the largest available, but rarely the limiting factor.
Chamber
65°C heated
Fully enclosed with active heating, so PETG and even some ABS work is realistic without warping fights.
Nozzle
300°C max
Covers PLA, PETG, TPU, and most carbon-fiber composite filaments without a hardware swap.

The dual-nozzle setup on the X2D isn’t the same system as Bambu’s larger H2D — that machine uses true IDEX with two fully independent carriages, which lets it mirror-print two objects at once. The X2D’s two nozzles share a single toolhead and switch mechanically, which is a simpler, lighter, and cheaper approach. You lose the ability to duplicate prints simultaneously, but for what most people actually use a second nozzle for — clean supports and the occasional two-color part — it does the job just as well and keeps the whole machine at a genuinely reasonable price.

It also comes with the sensor and monitoring package that used to be reserved for Bambu’s higher-end machines: a toolhead camera for AI-assisted print monitoring, LiDAR as standard rather than an upgrade, and HEPA filtration built in. None of that is essential, but all of it is the kind of thing you stop noticing you have until you go back to a printer without it.

If Supports Aren’t Your Bottleneck

The X2D is my pick specifically because of the kind of work covered on this site. It is not automatically the right answer for everyone, and it would be dishonest to pretend otherwise. Here’s how I’d actually split the decision by what you’re printing.

🖨️You mostly print single-color PLA and PETG, no complicated overhangs. Get a Bambu Lab P2S Combo instead, around the same $649–$899 range. It’s the direct successor to the hugely popular P1S — same reliable enclosed CoreXY platform, better screen, improved cooling, and the newer AMS 2 Pro that actively dries filament as it feeds. You will not miss the second nozzle if you’re not fighting supports regularly.
💰Budget is the deciding factor. The Bambu Lab A1 is the honest starting point — open-frame rather than enclosed, but it covers PLA and PETG well and the AMS ecosystem is fully compatible if you want to add multicolor later. If even that’s too much, the A1 Mini starts around $219 and is still a genuinely capable machine, just with a smaller build area.
You want the fastest print times for the least money, no brand loyalty. The Elegoo Centauri Carbon has been the standout budget disruptor of 2026 — a fully enclosed CoreXY machine with carbon-fiber reinforced rails, sub-19-minute benchmark prints, and a 320°C nozzle that handles PLA through ABS and composites, all for around $320–420. The tradeoff is no native multicolor system yet and a less polished slicer than Bambu’s, but as a single-color workhorse it’s very hard to beat at the price.
🆕This is your first printer ever and you want zero friction. The Creality SparkX i7 won a Best 3D Printer award at CES 2026 for exactly this reason — five-minute setup, fully automatic bed leveling and calibration, and genuinely approachable 4-color printing under $400. It’s open-frame with no heated chamber, so ABS is off the table, but for a first machine learning PLA and PETG, the out-of-box experience is the smoothest available right now.
🏭You print engineering materials — ABS, ASA, nylon, polycarbonate — and reliability matters more than price. Look at the Prusa Core One, around $1,099. It costs roughly double a comparable Bambu machine and the build volume is smaller, but Prusa’s open-source firmware, industrial-grade heated bed, and long-term part availability are genuinely a different tier for demanding materials and repeatable production runs. This is the printer people buy when they’ve been burned by warping and don’t want to think about it again.

What About Resin Printing?

Everything above is FDM — melted filament, which is what every build on this site uses and what I’d genuinely recommend for props, display pieces, and anything larger than a coin. Resin printing exists in a different category entirely: UV light curing liquid resin layer by layer, which produces sharper detail and smoother surfaces than FDM can match, at the cost of a much messier workflow involving isopropyl alcohol cleanup and post-curing under UV light.

If your interest is specifically miniatures, jewelry, or anything where fine surface detail matters more than size or material strength, a machine like the Elegoo Mars 5 Ultra is worth a look. But for the kind of large-format prop and cosplay work this site is built around, FDM remains the more practical choice, and I wouldn’t recommend a beginner start with resin’s added handling complexity.

Things That Matter More Than Which Printer You Pick

🌐Community size. Bambu Lab, Prusa, Creality, and Elegoo all have large, active user bases with troubleshooting guides, print profiles, and mods documented extensively on Reddit and Discord. A smaller or newer brand might have a great spec sheet and nobody to ask when something goes wrong.
🧾Combo vs. standalone. On nearly every machine in this list, buying the AMS or multicolor bundle instead of the bare printer is the upgrade people regret skipping. The base printer often starts you off with a single spool and no easy path to color mixing later.
🔧Slicer quality. Orca Slicer and Bambu Studio are both free, both excellent, and both covered in our full slicer setup guide. Whichever printer you buy, the software experience matters as much day-to-day as the hardware itself.
Don’t spend three weeks agonizing over this decision. Every printer mentioned here will produce genuinely good results once it’s dialed in. The differences between them matter far less than most spec-sheet comparisons make them sound, and every single one of them is capable of far better prints today than what cost three or four times as much just a few years ago. Pick the one that matches your budget and your actual use case, and spend your energy learning your slicer settings instead.
The honest bottom line

I picked the X2D because clean support removal solves a real, recurring problem in the kind of detailed prop work this site is about — not because it’s the fastest or the biggest or the most feature-packed machine on the market this year. That’s the right way to make this decision in general: figure out what actually slows you down or wastes your prints, and buy the printer that solves that specific thing. Everything else is a nice-to-have. Once the printer’s on your desk, our Orca Slicer setup guide covers every setting worth knowing before your first real print.

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