It seems this is just another one of the washplate style machines used in other countries that essentially just stirs the water in each direction, rather than moving the clothes in a uniform fashion the way US Whirlpool machines like mine do, and like the one in the video linked below. Whirlpool and Fisher&Paykel have pretty much taken the crown in the US by designing an effective impeller design that actually rolls the load in reverse while keeping balance and distribution, and are also gentle on the fabrics. Other washplate style top loaders such as Samsung and LG, and machines such as this "360 Bloomwash" design, seem to just yank the clothes around into a ball. The Haier machine we used in the apartment in Australia was like that. Basically it just violently spun the impeller one way, then reversed, and the clothes and water just twisted and tangled, and the machine wasn't really effective at cleaning even with the excessive amount of water it used. The key is that the rounded humps on the Cabrio style impeller are scooped in each direction so that each stroke pushes the clothing from the outside towards the middle but the strokes are kept relatively short so the load doesn't start to ball up and tangle on itself.
Apparently the "Start At" feature on YouTube doesn't translate to an embedded link, so start at 3:54 to see where the really good blooming begins.