Commercial model
Quote-based sales
No public pricing; commercial pilot and enterprise deployment only. That usually means the final commercial package depends on deployment scope, services, or negotiated terms.
Robot dossier
Titan
Release
May 19, 2025
Price
Price TBA
Connectivity
1
Status
Active
Battery
8 hours
Payload
40kg dual-arm payload
RoboForce's Titan is a physical-AI mobile manipulator built for demanding industrial work rather than home use. Officially introduced in May 2025, Titan is offered in wheeled and tracked base variants for outdoor and other unstructured environments, with pilot deployments in sectors including energy and broader industrial infrastructure. As of March 2026, RoboForce was still scaling manufacturing readiness and commercialization after announcing additional funding.
Listed price
Price TBA
No public pricing; commercial pilot and enterprise deployment only
Release window
May 19, 2025
Current status
Active
RoboForce
Last verified
Apr 5, 2026
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Technical overview
A fast read on the mechanical profile, sensing package, and platform integrations behind Titan.
Height
Not publicly disclosed
Weight
Not publicly disclosed
Battery Life
8 hours
Charging Time
Not publicly disclosed
Max Speed
Not publicly disclosed
Payload
40kg dual-arm payload
Operational profile
Capabilities
6
Connectivity
1
Key capabilities
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The Titan is a Commercial robot built by RoboForce. RoboForce's Titan is a physical-AI mobile manipulator built for demanding industrial work rather than home use. Officially introduced in May 2025, Titan is offered in wheeled and tracked base variants for outdoor and other unstructured environments, with pilot deployments in sectors including energy and broader industrial infrastructure. As of March 2026, RoboForce was still scaling manufacturing readiness and commercialization after announcing additional funding.
Pricing has not been publicly disclosed. See all RoboForce robots on the RoboForce page.
Detailed specifications for the Titan
Battery Life
8 hoursWith a battery life of 8 hours, the Titan can operate for sustained periods before requiring a recharge. Battery life is measured under typical operating conditions and may vary based on workload intensity and environmental factors.
Payload Capacity
40kg dual-arm payloadA payload capacity of 40kg dual-arm payload determines what the robot can carry or manipulate. This is a critical spec for delivery and transport tasks, defining the weight of items the robot can move.
The Titan uses RoboForce Domain Intelligence with the RF-Net 3D foundation model as its intelligence backbone. This AI platform powers the robot's decision-making, perception processing, and autonomous behavior. The sophistication of the AI stack directly impacts how well the robot handles unexpected situations and adapts to new environments.
The Titan integrates 1 sensor type, forming the perceptual foundation that enables autonomous operation.
This sensor configuration enables the Titan to perceive its environment and operate autonomously in its intended use cases. Multiple sensor modalities provide redundancy and more robust perception than any single sensor type alone.
Explore sensor technologies: components glossary · full components directory
Commercial robots handle tasks in business environments — delivering food in restaurants, guiding visitors in hotels, transporting supplies in hospitals, and moving inventory in warehouses. Their value is measured in operational efficiency, labor cost savings, and improved service consistency.
The Titan offers 6 distinct capabilities, each contributing to the robot's practical utility.
These capabilities work together with the robot's 1 onboard sensor type and RoboForce Domain Intelligence with the RF-Net 3D foundation model AI platform to deliver practical, real-world performance.
6
Capabilities
1
Sensor Type
AI
RoboForce Domain Intelligenc…
How the Titan communicates with your network, smart home devices, cloud services, and companion apps.
The Titan by RoboForce integrates 3 distinct technology components across sensing, connectivity, intelligence, and interaction layers.
The perception layer is built on Perception system details not publicly disclosed. These work in concert to give the robot a detailed understanding of its operating environment. This multi-sensor approach provides redundancy and enables the robot to function reliably even when individual sensors encounter challenging conditions such as low light, reflective surfaces, or cluttered spaces.
For communications, the Titan relies on Connectivity details not publicly disclosed. This connectivity stack ensures the robot can communicate with cloud services, local smart home devices, mobile apps, and other networked systems in its environment.
RoboForce Domain Intelligence with the RF-Net 3D foundation model serves as the computational brain, processing sensor data, making navigation decisions, and orchestrating the robot's autonomous behaviors. The quality of this AI platform directly influences how well the robot handles novel situations, adapts to changes in its environment, and improves its performance over time through learning.
Commercial robots are acquired by businesses including restaurants, hotels, hospitals, retail stores, and logistics facilities. Purchasing decisions typically involve operations managers and IT departments evaluating ROI against human labor costs.
Reliability and uptime, navigation in crowded dynamic environments, payload capacity, integration with business systems (POS, inventory management), ease of deployment and maintenance, and total cost of ownership (including service contracts) are the primary factors.
Pricing
The Titan is in active commercial production and currently sold by RoboForce. Check the manufacturer's website or authorized retailers for the latest stock and ordering information.
Engineering compromises and where this commercial robot excels
With 6 distinct capabilities, the Titan is designed as a versatile platform rather than a single-task device. This breadth means the robot can handle varied scenarios and workflows, reducing the need for multiple specialized robots and increasing its utility across different situations.
A battery life of 8 hours provides substantial operational runway. For commercial applications, this means longer work sessions between charges, fewer interruptions, and the ability to complete larger tasks or cover more area in a single charge cycle.
With a payload capacity of 40kg dual-arm payload, the Titan can handle meaningful physical tasks. This capacity enables practical applications like carrying tools, transporting materials, or supporting equipment mounts that lighter robots simply cannot accommodate.
With 1 sensor type, the Titan takes a minimalist approach to perception. While this keeps costs down and reduces complexity, it may limit the robot's ability to handle edge cases or operate in environments that demand multi-modal awareness. Buyers should verify that the available sensors cover their specific use-case requirements.
RoboForce has not published a public price for the Titan. While common for enterprise-class robotics, the absence of transparent pricing can complicate budgeting and comparison shopping. Prospective buyers will need to engage directly with the manufacturer for quotes, which may vary by configuration and volume.
No specific smart home or ecosystem compatibility is listed for the Titan. This does not necessarily mean the robot lacks integration options — the information may not yet be published — but buyers who rely on specific platforms (Apple HomeKit, Google Home, Amazon Alexa, etc.) should verify compatibility before purchasing.
Note: This strengths and trade-offs assessment is based on the Titan's documented specifications as tracked in the ui44 database. Real-world performance depends on deployment conditions, firmware maturity, and environmental factors. For the most current information, check the RoboForce manufacturer page or visit the official product page. Use the comparison tool to evaluate these trade-offs against competing robots in the same category.
Understanding the engineering behind this category
Commercial robots operate in the demanding intersection of technology and business operations. From restaurant servers to warehouse movers, these robots must perform reliably in dynamic, crowded environments while delivering measurable return on investment. The technology behind commercial robots emphasizes reliability, integration with business systems, and graceful handling of the unpredictable situations that characterize human-occupied commercial spaces.
Commercial robots navigate environments that are significantly more challenging than typical homes — crowded restaurant floors, busy hotel lobbies, and dense warehouse aisles all present unique navigation challenges. These robots typically use LiDAR combined with depth cameras for robust obstacle detection, with special attention to detecting low-height obstacles (children, pets, dropped items) and moving obstacles (people walking unpredictably). Commercial-grade navigation includes fleet coordination — multiple robots sharing maps and position data to avoid congestion and optimize collective efficiency. Elevator integration allows robots to serve multiple floors autonomously.
AI in commercial robots focuses on operational efficiency and customer interaction. Route optimization minimizes delivery times in restaurants. Task prioritization ensures urgent orders are handled first. Customer-facing AI must handle natural language interaction in noisy environments, provide useful information, and maintain a professional and brand-appropriate demeanor. Back-end AI integrates with business systems — restaurant POS (Point of Sale), hotel PMS (Property Management System), warehouse WMS (Warehouse Management System) — to receive tasks and report completions automatically. Predictive AI anticipates demand patterns, pre-positioning robots where they will be needed based on historical data.
Commercial robots combine navigation sensors (LiDAR, cameras, ultrasonic) with application-specific sensors. Restaurant delivery robots use weight sensors to confirm payload presence and tilt sensors to maintain tray stability. Warehouse robots use barcode or RFID readers for inventory tracking. Hotel robots may include temperature sensors for room-service food. All commercial robots share the need for robust human detection — they must navigate safely around unpredictable human movement while maintaining efficient operation. Edge-case handling is critical: a restaurant robot must correctly respond to a child running into its path, a guest stepping backward without looking, or a server carrying a full tray through a narrow aisle.
Commercial operations demand high uptime, making power management a business-critical concern. Robots serving during peak hours cannot afford lengthy charging breaks. Solutions include fast-charging docks positioned at strategic locations, hot-swappable battery packs for zero-downtime operation, and intelligent charging schedules that top up during naturally low-demand periods. Fleet management systems monitor battery levels across all robots and redistribute tasks to ensure no single robot runs critically low during service. Power consumption monitoring also feeds into TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) calculations that businesses use to evaluate robot deployment ROI.
Commercial robots operate in regulated business environments with specific safety requirements. Food-handling robots must meet hygiene standards. Robots in public spaces must comply with accessibility requirements, avoiding blocking wheelchair paths or emergency exits. Speed limits are typically set below walking pace in pedestrian areas. Visual and audio signals indicate the robot's presence and intent — lights, gentle sounds, or voice announcements warn nearby people. Payload security ensures items being transported cannot fall. In warehouse environments, safety zones around humans trigger automatic speed reduction or stopping. Integration with building fire alarm and evacuation systems ensures robots do not obstruct emergency procedures.
Commercial robotics is moving toward greater specialization and deeper business system integration. Rather than general-purpose commercial platforms, expect more robots designed specifically for restaurant table service, hotel room delivery, warehouse aisle picking, or retail shelf scanning. Fleet orchestration — coordinating dozens of robots across a large facility — will become more sophisticated. The business model is also evolving, with Robotics-as-a-Service (RaaS) subscriptions replacing upfront purchases, lowering the barrier to adoption for small and medium businesses.
The Titan by RoboForce incorporates many of these technology pillars. For a detailed look at the specific sensors and components used in the Titan, see the sensor analysis and connectivity sections above, or browse the complete components glossary for explanations of every technology used across the robotics industry.
How this robot compares in the commercial landscape
RoboForce has not publicly disclosed pricing for the Titan, which is typical for enterprise-focused robotics platforms that offer customized solutions and direct-sales relationships.
With 1 sensor type, the Titan takes a focused approach to perception, prioritizing the sensor modalities most relevant to its specific tasks rather than carrying a broad general-purpose sensor array.
Being currently available for purchase gives the Titan a practical advantage over competitors still in development or prototype stages. Buyers can evaluate the actual product rather than relying on spec-sheet promises that may change before release.
Side-by-side specs, capability overlap analysis, and key differentiators.
For the full picture of RoboForce's portfolio and market strategy, visit the RoboForce manufacturer page.
What the public profile tells you, and what still needs direct vendor confirmation
From a buying and rollout perspective, the Titan should be read as a commercial platform aimed at service operations that need predictable task throughput. ui44 currently tracks 6 capability signals, 1 sensor input, and a last verification date of 2026-04-05. That mix gives buyers a useful first-pass picture, but it is still only the public layer of due diligence, especially when procurement, uptime, and support commitments are decided directly with RoboForce.
Commercial model
Quote-based sales
No public pricing; commercial pilot and enterprise deployment only. That usually means the final commercial package depends on deployment scope, services, or negotiated terms.
Integration posture
1 connectivity option
The profile lists Connectivity details not publicly disclosed, plus RoboForce Domain Intelligence with the RF-Net 3D foundation model as the AI stack. That is enough to infer the basic network posture, but buyers should still confirm APIs, fleet management, and workflow integration details. ui44 does not yet list formal compatibility targets for this robot.
Spec disclosure
2/7 core specs public
ui44 currently has 2 of 7 core physical and operating specs filled in for this model, leaving 5 gaps that matter for deployment planning. Missing runtime, charge, speed, or payload details can materially change staffing and site-readiness assumptions.
The current profile is useful for scouting, but it still leaves meaningful operational unknowns. If this robot is heading toward a pilot or purchase discussion, the next step should be a structured vendor Q&A that fills the remaining runtime, charging, payload, safety, or integration blanks before anyone builds ROI assumptions around it.
If you want a faster apples-to-apples read, compare the Titan against nearby alternatives in ui44's compare view, then cross-check the underlying AI, sensor, and subsystem terms in the components glossary. For manufacturer-level context, the RoboForce profile helps anchor this robot inside the wider product lineup.
Practical guide from day one through years of ownership
Commercial robot deployment is a project, not just a setup. Begin with a site assessment covering floor plans, traffic patterns, integration requirements, and staff training needs. Map the operating environment with the robot, marking restricted areas, service points, and charging stations. Integrate with business systems — POS for restaurants, PMS for hotels, WMS for warehouses. Train staff on robot interaction, troubleshooting, and emergency procedures. Run a supervised pilot period before transitioning to full autonomous operation. Gather and address staff and customer feedback during the pilot to optimize the deployment before scaling.
Commercial robots earn their keep through consistent operation, making maintenance an operational priority rather than an afterthought. Establish daily visual inspection routines for operations staff. Schedule weekly maintenance windows for thorough cleaning, sensor calibration, and software updates. Track key performance indicators — delivery times, task completion rates, customer feedback — to detect performance degradation before it becomes noticeable. For food-handling robots, follow strict hygiene protocols including regular sanitization of tray surfaces and contact points. Multi-robot deployments benefit from staggered maintenance schedules to maintain coverage.
Commercial robot updates can add new capabilities, improve navigation in your specific environment, and fix operational edge cases. The manufacturer may release updates based on fleet-wide learning — improvements discovered at one deployment benefiting all customers. Test significant updates during low-traffic periods before deploying to your full fleet. Keep communication channels open with your robot vendor's support team to provide feedback that can drive improvement in future updates.
Commercial robots in daily operation can last three to five years or more with proper care. The primary wear items are wheels, motors, and batteries. Maintain a spare parts inventory for consumables to minimize downtime. Track operating hours and correlate with maintenance needs to develop predictive maintenance schedules specific to your deployment conditions. Consider the total cost of ownership over the deployment lifetime when evaluating robot vendors — the cheapest robot up front may cost more over five years if parts are expensive or support is limited.
For RoboForce-specific support resources and documentation, visit the RoboForce page on ui44 or check the manufacturer's official website at RoboForce's product page.
All Titan data on ui44 is verified against official RoboForce sources, including spec sheets, product pages, and press releases. Last verified: 2026-04-05. Official source: RoboForce product page. If you find outdated or incorrect information, please let us know — accuracy is our top priority.
See how the Titan stacks up — compare specs, browse the commercial category, or search the full database.