VFUN AI Vape Review

VFUN AI Vape is a touchscreen, Bluetooth-enabled smart pod system built for adult nicotine users who want a gadget-first device with adjustable power and a big on-device UI. Its strengths are the screen experience and feature set; its weaknesses are pocket practicality and the extra friction that comes with “smart” controls. It fits desk use, short commutes, and lounge sessions more than truly minimalist everyday carry.

Overview

Device Overall Score Pros Cons Ideal For
VFUN AI Vape 4.0/5 Big touchscreen UI; adjustable power; feature-rich Bulkier carry; more distractions; pod upkeep matters Tech-forward users who want settings + screen feedback

Verdict

The VFUN AI Vape nails the “smart device” vibe: the touchscreen makes it feel closer to a pocket gadget than a typical pod kit, and the adjustable power range gives you real control over warmth and density. The trade-off is simple: the more features you touch, the more you’ll notice pocket safety, menu friction, and the day-to-day reality of keeping a pod system clean and consistent. VFUN describes the brand as a Shenzhen-based global e-cigarette company with a tech-forward R&D angle, and the AI Vape matches that positioning.

Who It’s For

  • Adults who like screens, settings, and “status at a glance”
  • Users who want to fine-tune warmth within a broad wattage range
  • Desk/at-home vapers who don’t mind occasional UI fiddling

Who It’s Not For

  • Anyone who wants a zero-thinking grab-and-go disposable feel
  • Pocket-first users who hate accidental taps and screen smudges
  • People who dislike pod maintenance and condensation checks
VFUN AI Vape

Test Method

We ran the VFUN AI Vape across daily “normal use” (commute breaks, desk sessions, and evening wind-down) while logging Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability. We rotated wattage settings inside the device’s range, checked for output stability on back-to-back sessions, and watched for condensation around the mouthpiece and pod seating. Vape and nicotine products are for adults only; use isn’t recommended for minors, pregnant people, or people who don’t use nicotine, and our experience notes are subjective—not medical advice.

In-Use Notes

Within the first hour, I realized the AI Vape is basically a “screen device that happens to vape.” The touch interface pulled my attention the way a smartwatch does: quick glances, quick taps, then another puff. Marcus (a big-handed DL-leaning tester who runs devices hard) immediately pushed wattage higher and took longer pulls; the vape stayed composed, but you can feel how the power range changes the whole mouthfeel—cooler and softer down low, warmer and denser as you climb. Jamal (lean, always moving, jacket-pocket carry) cared less about the bells and whistles and more about whether it felt clean, comfortable, and predictable in short, frequent sessions.

The draw feel is where the device surprised me. With the airflow switch nudged tighter, the pull firms up and the vapor feels more “focused” on the tongue; opened up, it gets breezier and the vapor spreads across the palate faster, which can blur delicate notes but boosts overall satisfaction. The screen experience is genuinely useful for quick checks, but it’s also a distraction magnet—especially when you realize it’s designed to do more than just vaping. VFUN’s manual calls out a touch screen, airflow switch, replaceable pod format, and Bluetooth connectivity (including call and voice features).

What we liked

  • The wattage range creates meaningfully different warmth and density profiles
  • Touchscreen status checks reduce “guessing” during longer sessions
  • Airflow switch changes the draw enough to matter in daily use

Who it is best for

  • Adults who want a smart UI and don’t mind learning menus
  • Users who alternate between quick puffs and longer desk sessions
  • Anyone who likes to tune warmth rather than accept one fixed output

Where it falls short

  • The screen can be too easy to trigger when pocketed
  • Pod systems demand routine condensation checks to stay clean
  • Feature bloat: you’ll use a few functions a lot and ignore the rest
VFUN AI Vape

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Adjustable power for real warmth control More UI friction than simple pod kits
Touchscreen makes battery/status checks fast Touchscreen invites accidental touches
Airflow switch provides meaningful draw changes Pod upkeep is required to prevent messiness
Feature-rich “smart device” experience Less pocket-friendly than minimalist devices

Specs

  • Device type: smart pod system with replaceable pod
  • E-liquid capacity: 30 ml
  • Battery: 800 mAh
  • Power range: 12–26 W (we spent most time around 18–24 W)
  • Display: TFT screen with touch interface
  • Charging: USB-C (Type-C)
  • Dimensions: listed as 51 × 25 × 96.3 mm (our quick measure read ~51 × 25 × 97 mm)
  • Flavor lineup: 10 flavors
VFUN AI Vape

Score Breakdown

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.1 Good saturation at mid wattage; higher power can flatten subtle notes.
Throat Hit 3.9 Adjustable warmth helps, but it’s not a “punch-first” device by feel.
Vapor Production 4.2 Noticeably denser output as wattage climbs; stays stable on repeat sessions.
Airflow/Draw 4.0 Airflow switch provides usable range; draw stays smooth without weird turbulence.
Battery Life 4.0 800 mAh is adequate; power setting choice clearly determines how often you charge.
Leak Resistance 3.8 Typical pod-system reality: stays clean if you wipe condensation and seat pods carefully.
Build Quality 4.1 Feels like a gadget, not a toy; buttons/ports feel properly anchored for daily handling.
Ease of Use 3.7 Touch UI is powerful but adds steps; you need a “setup mindset” at first.
Portability 3.5 Carryable, but screen size and accidental touches make it less pocket-friendly.
Overall 4.0 A strong choice for adults who want a smart interface and adjustable output more than simplicity.

Choosing VFUN AI Vape

Pick this device if you value (1) screen-driven feedback, (2) adjustable wattage, and (3) an airflow switch that changes the draw enough to tune your sessions. It’s a better fit for moderate-to-experienced users who already know whether they prefer cooler, tighter pulls or warmer, more open hits. Trade-offs: you’ll accept extra menu interaction and commit to basic pod hygiene.

If you want a simpler “screen disposable” vibe, consider Geek Bar Pulse–style smart disposables that emphasize quick use over deep settings. If you want long-run consistency with fewer distractions, a mainstream pod kit like Uwell Caliburn–class devices can be easier to live with day to day.

VFUN AI Vape

Limitations

The AI Vape’s weaknesses are mostly “smart device” side effects—more interface, more attention, more to bump accidentally.

  • Touchscreen can trigger when pocketed unless you’re careful about carry
  • The feature set adds learning curve and slows truly quick sessions
  • Pod systems can develop condensation that you need to wipe to keep the mouthpiece clean

VFUN AI Vape vs Others

Why choose these models

  • You want adjustable 12–26 W output and a large touch UI in one device
  • You like an airflow switch that meaningfully changes the draw feel
  • You prefer a “device dashboard” experience over minimalist simplicity

Alternatives to consider

  • Geek Bar Pulse-class smart disposables: simpler daily use, fewer menus
  • Lost Mary MO-series disposables: straightforward carry, predictable sessions
  • Caliburn-class pod kits: less distraction, easier routine maintenance

Pro Tips for VFUN AI Vape

  • Start mid-range wattage and move in small steps; big jumps can wash out flavor nuance.
  • Treat the airflow switch like a “session selector”: tighter for focused puffs, open for relaxed clouds.
  • Wipe the mouthpiece area daily; condensation is easier to prevent than to clean later.
  • If you pocket-carry, position the screen inward and avoid tight pockets that press on the face.
  • Keep puffs comfortably under the device’s overtime warning threshold (the manual flags >10 seconds).
  • Re-seat pods carefully and check for a clean fit before long sessions.
  • If you use Bluetooth features, pair once in a calm setting and avoid re-pairing on the fly.
  • Use the screen as a quick check, not a constant interaction—less fiddling usually means more consistent sessions.
  • Don’t chase maximum vapor all day; higher power can shorten practical battery endurance.

FAQs

Is it more MTL or DL?

It leans flexible. Tightening airflow and lowering wattage makes it feel more controlled; opening airflow and raising power makes it more airy and dense.

Does the touchscreen help, or is it just a gimmick?

It helps for quick status checks and setting changes, but it also invites extra interaction that some users will find annoying.

How pocket-friendly is it?

Carryable, but not carefree. The larger screen face and touch controls demand more mindful pocket habits than simpler devices.

Any real benefit to the smart features?

If you like device feedback and settings control, yes. If you want pure simplicity, those features become friction fast.

About the Author: Chris Miller

Chris Miller is the lead reviewer and primary author at VapePicks. He coordinates the site’s hands-on testing process and writes the final verdicts that appear in each review. His background comes from long-term work in consumer electronics, where day-to-day reliability matters more than launch-day impressions. That approach carries into nicotine-device coverage, with a focus on build quality, device consistency, and the practical details that show up after a device has been carried and used for several days.

In testing, Chris concentrates on battery behavior and charging stability, especially signs like abnormal heat, fast drain, or uneven output. He also tracks leaking, condensate buildup, and mouthpiece hygiene in normal routines such as commuting, short work breaks, and longer evening sessions. When a device includes draw activation or button firing, he watches for misfires and inconsistent triggering. Flavor and throat hit notes are treated as subjective experience, recorded for context, and separated from health interpretation.

Chris works with the fixed VapePicks testing team, which includes a high-intensity tester for stress and heat checks, plus an everyday-carry tester who focuses on portability and pocket reliability. For safety context, VapePicks relies on established public guidance and a clinical advisor’s limited review of risk language, rather than personal medical recommendations.

VapePicks content is written for adults. Nicotine is highly addictive, and e-cigarettes are not for youth, pregnant individuals, or people who do not already use nicotine products.