This OTHER link has 113 reviews for a slightly older model, and some of the negative reviews have photos that are pretty good evidence this doesn't really "work" all that well: https://www.amazon.com/AirDresser-Deodorizes-Sanitizes-Installation-DF60R8200DG/dp/B0896Q7TSF/
Look at these photos, this product can't get wrinkles out of clothing fully: https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/R2GDWHVQQ0F6D3
you are talking to someone who owns a sleeve board
Now I'm looking up "sleeve board". :-) I iron my clothing every day.
About 20 years ago I lived in a rental unit (it was approximately like a "mother in law unit") that did not have it's own dedicated washer/dryer. I bought and installed an LG combo washer dryer of the type where you put the clothing inside it, it first washes, then drys the clothing, THEN you remove the clothing for the first time. It's made for compact spaces/situations and runs on 110V (regular wall plug) electricity, not gas and not 220V. The issue there is drying the clothes is a challenge (all normal dryers use either gas or 220V to dry faster), and one of the ways it got clothes dry is spinning them at a truly high rate of speed. The side effect was the most wrinkled clothing I've ever experienced. Which led me to find out about the Rowenta Steam irons like this model: https://www.amazon.com/Rowenta-DG8624U1-Perfect-Advanced-Technology-dp-B084JBZPLG/dp/B084JBZPLG/
I have owned three (?) so far, the model changes each time slightly. I think the first one worked the very best of any of them, some of the reviews say they had to change it for "safety" reasons. I iron one shirt and one pair of pants every day of my life, and the Rowenta steam irons generally stop working/break after 5 or 6 years. At around $300 each it's 10x as expensive as a random iron from Target, but I don't care, it's the best iron I've found. When you pull the trigger it produces a continuous stream of steam, release the trigger and it stops the stream. Because the tank of water sits on the ironing board and not INSIDE the iron, the part of the iron you have to physically lift (the soleplate) is lighter than most irons, but at the same time the tank of water can be much larger than most irons. I don't even care that it breaks/stops working every 5 years because it's assembled by drunk line workers (that's from one of the reviews). I just care that it's the very best iron I've ever used by a factor of 2 or 3.