- Price N/A
- Weight 22kg
- Battery Life N/A (tethered — external power via umbilical cable)
- Max Speed Not disclosed
- Status Active
- Category Research
Capabilities
The table expands across desktop, stays dense on mobile, and highlights the strongest numeric values so the real tradeoffs are easy to spot.
Capabilities
Capabilities
Capabilities
| Spec | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Height | 104cm | 11.7cm | 58cm |
| Weight | 22kg | 194g | 7.3kg |
| Battery Life | N/A (tethered — external power via umbilical cable) | About 1 day of typical use | ~1 hour |
| Charging Time | N/A | About 100 minutes | Not disclosed |
| Max Speed | Not disclosed | N/A | 23 cm/s (running) |
| AI | YARP middleware + open-source ML frameworks | Sharp CE-LLM conversational AI running on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 662 octa-core processor with 3GB RAM and 32GB storage. | Sony proprietary; face/voice recognition, emotional behavior system |
| Sensors | Stereo Cameras, Microphones, Hall-Effect Joint Sensors, Force/Torque Sensors, Tactile Skin (capacitive), Gyroscope, Accelerometer | 5MP autofocus camera, Accelerometer, Magnetic field sensor, Gyroscope, Microphone, Face recognition | Cameras (stereo vision), Microphones, Touch Sensors, Gyroscope, Accelerometer |
| Connectivity | Gigabit Ethernet, CANBus (internal) | Wi-Fi 5 (802.11a/b/g/n/ac), Bluetooth 5.0, GPS, USB Type-C | Wi-Fi |
| Voice Assistants | None | None | None |
| Status | Active | Available | Discontinued |
| Category | Research | Companions | Research |
| Manufacturer | Italian Institute of Technology | Sharp | Sony |
Capability matrix
Use this grid when the shortlist is already close and feature gaps become the real tiebreaker.
| Capability | iCub | Poketomo | QRIO |
|---|---|---|---|
| Archery (learned via reinforcement learning) | ✓ | — | — |
| Autonomous Navigation | — | — | ✓ |
| Bipedal Walking | ✓ | — | ✓ |
| Camera-assisted scene recognition | — | ✓ | — |
| Collision Avoidance | ✓ | — | — |
| Conversational AI companionship | — | ✓ | — |
| Crawling | ✓ | — | — |
| Dancing | — | — | ✓ |
| Diary summaries in companion app | — | ✓ | — |
| Embodied Cognition Research | ✓ | — | — |
| Emotion expression through LEDs, voice, and gestures | — | ✓ | — |
| Emotional Expression | — | — | ✓ |
| Face Recognition | — | — | ✓ |
| Face recognition | — | ✓ | — |
| Facial Expressions (LED-based) | ✓ | — | — |
| Force-Controlled Manipulation | ✓ | — | — |
| Human Interaction | — | — | ✓ |
| Memory of conversations and outings | — | ✓ | — |
| Object Grasping | ✓ | — | ✓ |
| Proactive conversations | — | ✓ | — |
| Robot and app memory sync | — | ✓ | — |
| Running (first bipedal robot to run) | — | — | ✓ |
| Visual Tracking | ✓ | — | — |
| Voice Recognition | — | — | ✓ |
| Voice recognition | — | ✓ | — |
| Weather, news, and alarm functions | — | ✓ | — |
Use this flow to get to a clean shortlist fast. The route works best as a dense research workbench, not a marketing page.
Start with robots that solve the same job. Use category anchors like Humanoid, Cleaning, Companions, Lawn & Garden before you worry about micro-spec wins.
Check price, status, battery, sensors, and capabilities before getting lost in minor spec rows.
Once you have a shortlist, hide shared rows. That turns the table from a spec dump into a real decision tool.
A dedicated cleaner versus a home assistant with cleaning features can reveal whether you really need a specialist or just broader household coverage. Compare around the same outcome, not the same marketing language.
Use a prebuilt pairing when blank-page friction is the problem. Open one, swap robots, and keep moving.
Price bracket check — Roomba Mini versus AquaSense X shows what the premium tier actually buys in navigation, maintenance, and smart-home polish.
Same-brand shortlist — 4NE-1 Mini versus 4NE-1 isolates whether the higher tier actually changes the ownership story.
Mobility platforms — CyberDog 2 versus D1 Pro is a fast way to compare payload, stability, and commercial ambition inside the quadruped category.
Home presence check — Miko Mini versus LOVOT reveals how much extra presence, hardware, and ecosystem you buy as companion robots move upmarket.
Turn comparison rows into an actual recommendation — not just more reading.
Not all spec deltas matter equally. Rank your buying criteria before crowning a winner.
The sticker price is only one row. Subscriptions, consumables, and service access often decide the real winner.
Subscriptions
Cloud AI and premium app tiers can make a cheaper robot more expensive over three years.
Consumables
Brushes, pads, filters, and bags flip the value story on high-frequency robots.
Energy & battery
Large batteries and frequent charging reveal everyday operating demands.
Repair & warranty
Local servicing and spare-parts access are the quietest but most important long-term costs.
Specs describe ideal conditions. Your rooms, pets, and Wi-Fi determine what actually performs.
Of 206 robots tracked, 142 are available now. For household tasks, getting a capable robot into daily use today usually beats waiting for incremental improvements. For research or early-adopter use, waiting can make sense if the next model changes the platform story.
If two robots are still neck-and-neck, use softer signals that affect ownership quality more than spec sheets admit.
Comparison FAQ
Short answers to the questions that usually show up once the shortlist is live and the tradeoffs feel real.