In April 2026, based in Shenzhen Yidimu launched a Kickstarter campaign for MagProa 14K resin desktop printer optimized for usability and easy workflow, priced at $3,499 early-bird. The 3D printing industry is in a weird place right now. On the one hand, it’s never been more affordable: consumer resin printers now start under $150, and the broader market is recovering from a recession. On the other hand, it’s a market now based on relentless commoditization: a race to the bottom on price, with brands competing on a machine’s specifics rather than its usability.
The MagPro resin printer is an unusual bet, a high-priced machine aimed at a gap that the market has talked about a lot but rarely fills convincingly.
State of the 3D Printing Market
The current desktop 3D printing market can be interpreted as being divided into three main levels. At the bottom is a full, competitive lineup of affordable consumer machines, light and comfortable, sitting on a hobbyist’s desk, and capable enough to make the category mainstream. At the top are industrial systems that can cost as much as a car, increasingly capable machines that can instantly build finished products rather than prototypes. MagPro sits in the middle: machines that aspire to have professional-grade reliability and production quality without the price or space required for dedicated industrial equipment.


Quality construction
The printer’s specification is the 14K resolution screen, as the company claims over 90% light uniformity across the build area. Most desktop printers struggle with uneven light distribution, which is used to harden the resin, and its unevenness can lead to inconsistent solidity, distorted models, and lost detail. MagPro’s custom optical system is designed to ensure that each pixel hardens the resin at the correct consistent intensity.
Another interesting feature is the tool-free automatic release mechanism of the machine. Traditional resin printers require a scraper to remove the final prints, a delicate process that often ends up destroying models and scratching the build plates. Instead, this system uses a quick-release magnetic platform that allows finished prints to come out without tools.


These two characteristics are relevant because the gap between entry-level and professional resin printing is not primarily about resolution or technical quality, as is often the case with other technology products. The gap is about friction in the workflow: the accumulated costs of manual leveling, scraping and post-processing, all of which increase the risk of failed prints. An optimized workflow allows professional production to run more smoothly and also allows amateur users to fiddle less with equipment and shorten their learning curve.


MagPro mount
What MagPro aims to do is to serve a complex category 3D printing users who need production reliability and workflow automation in a desktop space: think independent jewelry designers, product design studios that need rapid client-presentable models, or orthodontic labs that run twenty dental models a day. This category is broad, but currently underserved by both the consumer market’s race for low prices and the industrial market’s race for top quality.
If Yidimu is able to fill this gap depends on things a Kickstarter The campaign cannot yet be proven, but it is a credible case. Its design decisions aren’t the usual feature checklist, but a coherent response to the real frustrations of small-scale professional resin printing, and if it delivers, the MagPro could be a game-changer for many kinds of specialists worldwide.





