The system replaces static shooting machines with a quad-camera 4K vision array. Powered by a high-performance chip, the device tracks player movement in real-time to adjust passing trajectories and timing dynamically. According to the company, this automation allows an athlete to complete 500 game-realistic shots in 45 minutes, a workflow that would typically require four hours in a traditional gym setting. Beyond physical drills, the integrated AI Coach Report analyzes over 20 metrics, including release stability and shot distribution, to provide structured performance feedback.
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LUMISTAR Debuts AI-Driven Basketball Trainer on Kickstarter
High-level basketball training has long required a coach, a rebound partner, and a specialized facility, creating a bottleneck for individual progress. LUMISTAR is attempting to bypass these physical constraints with CARRY, an AI-powered training system that debuted on Kickstarter today with an early-bird price of $2,499.

Designed for portability, the unit can be deployed in roughly 60 seconds, aiming to bring professional-grade training to non-traditional environments. The hardware has already undergone testing with over 300 users, including WNBA champion Aerial Powers and former NBA player Derrick Brown. Following a public demonstration at CES 2026, the company hosted field sessions in Los Angeles with trainers and athletes such as Sean Marshall and the streetball player known as Bone Collector. With the Kickstarter campaign now live, deliveries for the system are scheduled to begin in the fourth quarter of 2026, ahead of an eventual retail launch at $4,999.
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