From April 10 to 12, 2026, the diving community gathered at ADEX Singapore 2026, held at Suntec Singapore Convention & Exhibition Centre, Halls 403-406. DIVEVOLK exhibited at Booth F35, joining distributors, creators, freedivers, mermaid performers, underwater photographers, and everyday divers for three days of hands-on product demos and live underwater storytelling.

ADEX has always been more than a trade show. It is where the region's dive community compares gear, swaps travel plans, meets instructors and operators, and discovers the tools that will shape the next season underwater. For DIVEVOLK, the Singapore show was a chance to put the latest smartphone underwater photography ecosystem directly into people's hands.
Booth F35 Became a Hands-On Test Zone
The most useful trade show conversations happen when a visitor can hold a product, press the controls, and immediately understand how it solves a real diving problem. That was the energy around Booth F35 throughout ADEX Singapore.
Distributors and retail partners used the booth to explain DIVEVOLK's full system: underwater phone housings, SeaTouch 4 Max kits, lighting, lens accessories, and new control tools designed to make underwater shooting feel less like a technical workaround and more like normal smartphone creation.

Visitors were especially interested in how the system handles the small friction points that matter underwater: changing shooting modes, adjusting light output, swapping lenses quickly, and keeping the phone usable without opening the housing. For divers used to complicated camera trays and menu-heavy workflows, the appeal was simple: keep the creative control, reduce the handling burden.

New Accessories Made the Workflow Easier to Understand
DIVEVOLK's latest underwater photography accessories drew steady attention because they address common problems divers encounter once they start filming more seriously.
- Shutter control gives users a more stable way to trigger photo and video capture while maintaining grip on the rig.
- Video Light Controller helps divers manage lighting more intuitively during a shot, especially when subject distance or ambient light changes.
- Dual-port clamp design supports two adapter rings, making lens switching more practical for creators who move between wide-angle scenes and close-up subjects.
These are not flashy features for a spec sheet. They are the kinds of practical details that decide whether a diver comes back from a trip with one lucky clip or a complete visual story. Paired with DIVEVOLK lighting and lens accessories, the SeaTouch ecosystem gives creators a modular path from simple phone housing to a more complete underwater imaging rig.

SeaLink Showed What Real-Time Underwater Connection Can Feel Like
The product that changed the conversation most quickly was SeaLink, DIVEVOLK's underwater smartphone data transmitter. At the booth, visitors saw how SeaLink can support real-time underwater signal use cases such as live video, video calls, and broadcast-style sharing from below the surface.
For many attendees, the surprise was not just that an underwater livestream is possible. It was how many practical scenarios suddenly become easier to imagine: a dive operator showing guests what is happening in the tank, an instructor demonstrating a skill to people above the water, a creator producing live event content, or a brand turning an underwater performance into something an audience can watch in real time.
The booth walkthrough video captured the full setup: SeaLink front and center, waterproof housings on display, lighting accessories mounted on rigs, and visitors moving through the stand to compare options. It gave the product story a physical shape. SeaLink is not a separate gadget sitting outside the ecosystem; it extends the same smartphone-based workflow from capture into communication.
A Live Mermaid Performance With MFI
One of the clearest demonstrations came through DIVEVOLK's collaboration with MFI International Mermaid Federation. Using SeaLink during a mermaid performance, the team showed how underwater performance can become live, shareable content instead of something limited to the people standing beside the tank.

The setup turned a familiar event format into something more interactive. A performer underwater, a smartphone in a housing, and a live signal above the surface created a direct bridge between the tank and the audience. For mermaid schools, aquarium events, pool demonstrations, brand activations, and training showcases, that kind of connection opens a new way to document and present underwater work.
It also fits a broader shift in the water-sports world: mermaid performance and training are becoming more structured, with agencies such as PADI offering dedicated mermaid course pathways. For that community, reliable underwater capture and real-time visibility can make performances easier to teach, promote, and share.
The performance also reinforced a broader point: underwater imaging is not only about taking a beautiful still photo after the dive. Increasingly, divers and creators want the underwater moment to be visible while it is happening. SeaLink is built for that shift.
Creators and New Users Reacted in Real Time
ADEX Singapore also brought in a steady stream of social creators and first-time DIVEVOLK users. Many came to film short videos, test the housing controls, and see whether a smartphone-based system could handle the kind of content they normally associate with a dedicated action camera or mirrorless rig.

The most common reaction was curiosity turning into recognition. Once visitors saw the touchscreen response, the accessory mounting options, and the way the system works with normal phone behavior, the product stopped feeling like a specialty dive gadget. It felt like a familiar creative tool adapted for the underwater environment.
That response matters. DIVEVOLK's goal has never been to make underwater photography feel more exclusive. It is to make serious underwater creation easier to start, easier to travel with, and easier to share.
TripDrive Demonstrated the Housing in Water
Another highlight came from TripDrive's water demonstration, where a smartphone housing was used directly inside the ADEX360 tank environment. The setup gave visitors a simple visual proof point: this is not just a product to inspect on a table. It is designed to be handled in water, framed through glass, filmed by spectators, and used in front of a live audience.


For new users, that kind of visible demonstration removes uncertainty. They can see the housing in the tank, watch how it is held, and imagine the same workflow on a reef, in a pool session, or during a travel dive.
What ADEX Singapore Confirmed
ADEX Singapore 2026 confirmed something DIVEVOLK has been seeing across global dive shows this year: underwater content creation is becoming more immediate, more social, and more accessible. Divers still care about image quality, reliability, and control. But they also want a system that fits how people already create on land: shoot, adjust, share, talk, livestream, and keep moving.
That is why the booth conversations kept coming back to the same products. SeaTouch 4 Max kits make the smartphone usable underwater. The shutter, Video Light Controller, dual-port clamp, lenses, and lights make shooting more controlled. SeaLink adds the missing layer: real-time connection.
For divers, creators, instructors, resorts, and event teams, the message from Singapore was clear. The future of underwater imaging is not only about bigger cameras. It is about smarter workflows that let more people bring the underwater world to the surface.
Explore DIVEVOLK's underwater phone housings, build a complete SeaTouch 4 Max kit, or contact us for distributor, event, and partnership inquiries.

