this post was submitted on 18 Sep 2025
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Wait. I thought bambu made good printers? Why fuck them?
*I ask because I want a 3d printer for christmas and don't know which to get. The bambu seems great.
https://3dprintingindustry.com/news/bambu-lab-controversy-deepens-firmware-update-sparks-backlash-240588/
TL;DR: they're infecting it with (even more) proprietary garbage, which is a slap in the face to a community built on the ethos of the RepRap project. Everything in hobbyist 3D printing -- the software, the firmware, and the hardware -- is built on open-source designs, and Bambu's attitude is to take all that and then not give back.
Ahh shit. Ok so Prusa or Qidi is the way to go? I did some research last night. I'm just entirely new to the whole scene. So I'm a total noob.
I hesitate to actually make a recommendation other than "not Bambu" because I haven't done a ton of research myself.
I personally own a Creality Ender 3 V3 SE (that I got on open-box discount from Microcenter for <$150, BTW) which used to be considered the best entry-level printer but now seems to be getting less recommended as newer competitors come out? I'm not sure what I'm missing out on, TBH, other than obvious higher-end performance features that would move a printer out of that market segment. Any ease-of-use features it lacks can be fixed by hooking a Raspberry Pi running Octoprint to it, but I don't mind enough to bother. (I also own an old Monoprice Select Mini, but that's not relevant in 2025 and I only mention it to say that the Ender wasn't my first printer.)
I think the Ender V3 SE is a fine choice if you're just getting started, unless you want to spend a bunch more money (either to get capabilities like large print volume, a heated chamber for exotic filaments, or multi-color, or to pay a premium to support a brand that gives back to the community).