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Search is the fastest route on ui44 for high-volume scanning: robot names, manufacturers, categories, capabilities, sensors, connectivity, and AI stacks all surface in one workspace that stays usable on mobile, laptop, and 4K.

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Showing matches for humanoid. Edit and the workspace updates in place.

Quick starts for common research modes: shortlist by category, validate a specific technology, or jump straight to a known brand.

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Type a query to see live matches across the entire index of robots, or clear it to browse by category and find what you need through structured directory navigation.

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85 results for "humanoid"

Match labels show why each robot surfaced for this query. The result deck stays dense enough to scan fast while keeping individual entries distinct and readable.

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Digit
Humanoid | Agility

Digit

Purpose-built humanoid for logistics and warehouse operations. Commercially deployed at multiple Fortune 500 companies including Amazon, Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada (RaaS deal, Feb 2026), Mercado Libre (Dec 2025), Schaeffler, and GXO. Produced at Agility's RoboFacility in Salem, Oregon. Enterprise RaaS (Robots-as-a-Service) model — no consumer pricing available.

Category Description

Price

Enterprise deployment via Agility sales / RaaS only. No public pricing; contact Agility for deployment.

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Apollo
Humanoid | Apptronik

Apollo

Apptronik's general-purpose humanoid robot, developed from experience building NASA's Valkyrie. Apptronik announced a commercial agreement with Mercedes-Benz in 2024 as its first public Apollo deployment, with factory pilot use cases for logistics and kit delivery. Backed by Google and based in Austin, TX.

Category Description

Price

No public pricing (enterprise)

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Atlas (Electric)
Humanoid | Boston Dynamics

Atlas (Electric)

Boston Dynamics' fully electric humanoid robot, unveiled at CES 2026, designed for a wide array of industrial tasks from material handling to order fulfillment. Production began immediately at Boston headquarters, with 2026 deployments fully committed — fleets shipping to Hyundai's Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and Google DeepMind, with additional customers planned for early 2027. Atlas features 56 degrees of freedom, fully rotational joints, a 2.3m reach, and 50kg instant lift capacity. The robot autonomously swaps its own batteries in under 3 minutes for continuous 24/7 operation. Trained using AI foundation models including a partnership with Google DeepMind, with fleet-wide task replication — once one Atlas learns a task, it deploys across the entire fleet. IP67-rated for harsh environments, with fenceless human safety guarding. Offered to qualified enterprise prospects, not sold to normal consumers. Successor to the hydraulic Atlas research platform.

Category Description

Price

No official pricing published

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DOBOT Atom
Humanoid | DOBOT

DOBOT Atom

DOBOT Atom is a full-size humanoid robot platform focused on dexterous manipulation and human-like straight-knee walking. DOBOT states Atom has 28 upper-body degrees of freedom, ±0.05 mm precision, and ROM-1 embodied AI with 7.7× industry-standard compute. The robot was publicly announced in 2025.

Category Description

Price

$79,000

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PM01
Humanoid | EngineAI

PM01

EngineAI's PM01 is a compact humanoid platform aimed at commercial and educational developers. The company positions PM01 as an open embodied-intelligence platform with quick-release battery packs and support for cross-platform algorithm deployment. Official PM01 specifications list a 1.4 m standing height class, around 42-43 kg operating weight, up to 24 total DoF (depending on edition), >2 m/s movement speed, and nearly 2 hours of battery life.

Category Description

Price

No current official public list price on EngineAI product page; historical launch coverage cited ~88,000 yuan promotional pricing in early 2025

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Humanoid | EngineAI

T800

EngineAI's T800 is a full-size humanoid robot family positioned for industrial collaboration, inspection, research, logistics, and service deployments. Officially launched in December 2025 and shown globally at CES 2026, the platform is offered in Basic, Open Source, Pro, and Max editions. EngineAI says the T800 stands 173 cm tall, uses in-house joint modules capable of up to 450 N·m peak torque, supports hardware movement speeds of at least 3 m/s, and pairs active leg-joint cooling with quick-release battery packs for 4-5 hours of operation. Higher-tier versions add stereo-vision plus LiDAR perception, dexterous 7-DoF hands, and more onboard compute for developers and more demanding manipulation tasks.

Category Description

Price

¥180,000

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Humanoid | Faraday Future

FF Futurist

Full-size professional humanoid robot from Faraday Future's EAI Robotics division, launched at the NADA Show in Las Vegas on February 5, 2026. Standing 169 cm tall and weighing 69 kg, the FF Futurist is powered by an NVIDIA Jetson Orin processor delivering 200 TOPS of AI compute. It features 28 high-performance motors with 500 Nm peak torque and harmonic drive gearing, enabling 40 degrees of freedom overall (7 DOF per arm) with five-fingered dexterous hands. A hot-swappable battery provides up to 3 hours of runtime. The perception suite includes 3D LiDAR, an RGB-D camera, a fisheye camera, multiple HD cameras, and tactile sensors, with connectivity via Wi-Fi, 4G, 5G, and VR teleoperation support. A customizable LCD face display enables natural interaction in up to 50 languages. The robot is positioned for professional roles including concierge services, sales advising, event hosting, teaching assistance, and brand ambassadorship, with future software updates planned for home and factory applications. First deliveries began in late February 2026, with over 20 units shipped by March 2026.

Category Description

Price

$34,990

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Humanoid | Faraday Future

FF Master

Compact athletic humanoid robot from Faraday Future's EAI Robotics division, launched alongside the FF Futurist at the NADA Show in Las Vegas on February 5, 2026. Standing 131 cm tall and weighing 39 kg, the FF Master is designed for home companion, educational, and interactive roles rather than heavy professional tasks. It is powered by an NVIDIA Jetson Orin NX processor delivering 157 TOPS of AI compute and features 30 degrees of freedom in its body with five-fingered dexterous hands (7 DOF per arm). The robot's 30 high-efficiency drive motors produce up to 120 Nm of peak torque, enabling agile motion at speeds up to 7.2 km/h. Its perception suite includes 3D LiDAR, stereo RGB cameras, an interactive RGB camera, an RGB-D camera, and a rear RGB camera, with connectivity via Wi-Fi, 4G, 5G, and VR teleoperation. FF positions the Master as a home and family companion — it can help children with homework, converse with elderly family members, assist in remote home monitoring through onboard cameras and sensors, and serve as an interactive presence at events and in classrooms. The robot supports natural language interaction in up to 50 languages and is designed to adapt and learn new skills over time through OTA software updates. First deliveries began in late February 2026, with over 20 units shipped by March 2026.

Category Description

Price

$19,990

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Sprout
Humanoid | Fauna Robotics

Sprout

Fauna Robotics' bipedal humanoid developer platform designed for safe human interaction. Sprout is a 107cm tall, 22.7kg robot with 29 degrees of freedom, powered by an NVIDIA Jetson AGX Orin 64GB. Designed in New York City and assembled in America, Sprout features a soft exterior, compliant motor control, and a tiered safety system — making it suitable for homes, classrooms, retail, and research labs. The Creator Edition ships today with full SDK access, built-in autonomy, and social behaviors out of the box. Featured on IEEE Spectrum's Video Friday, Sprout is being used by developers, enterprises, and researchers to build next-generation robotics applications.

Category Description

Price

Contact sales (Creator Edition available now)

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Humanoid | Figure AI

Figure 03

Figure AI's latest humanoid robot, announced October 2025. Uses in-house Helix VLA system (OpenAI partnership ended in 2025). BMW and Figure AI are evaluating Figure 03 for future production deployments following the success of Figure 02 at Spartanburg and Leipzig plants. Not available for consumer purchase.

Category Description

Price

No pricing announced

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Figure 02
Humanoid | Figure AI

Figure 02

Figure AI's second-generation humanoid robot, unveiled August 6, 2024. Built for industrial deployment with integrated cabling, torso-mounted battery, and 3x the onboard AI compute of its predecessor. Deployed at BMW's Spartanburg plant where it contributed to the production of over 30,000 cars across 1,250+ hours of runtime. Officially retired following the launch of Figure 03 in October 2025.

Category Description

Price

Not publicly priced (commercial/industrial only)

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Humanoid | Fourier

GR-2

Fourier's second-generation humanoid robot, launched in October 2024. The GR-2 features 53 joints, 12-DoF dexterous hands with array-type tactile sensors, and FSA 2.0 actuators with peak torques exceeding 380 N·m. Built on feedback from GR-1 deployments, it offers integrated cabling, improved manufacturing, and better sim-to-real transfer. Supports NVIDIA Isaac Lab, ROS, and MuJoCo. Aimed at research institutions and enterprise customers exploring humanoid robotics applications.

Category Description

Price

No public pricing (research/enterprise)

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Next step after "humanoid"

Turn 85 search results into an actual decision.

Once the deck stops feeling noisy, stop typing and change tools: compare finalists side by side, widen into a category map, or sanity-check the manufacturer context before committing to the shortlist.

Open compare

Reading the result deck

Stop searching once the shortlist starts to repeat.

85 results is usually enough to expose the right cluster. The next lift should come from structured comparison, not from typing more words into the same field.

1. Trim

Drop the obvious mismatches by maker, price, or category.

2. Open

Open the best 2-4 robots in parallel for deeper spec context.

3. Compare

Use compare once the decision is a tradeoff, not discovery.

Need a broader view?

Switch tools when the question changes.

Search wins when you know the signal. Directory routes win when you need a map of the entire field. Use both deliberately instead of forcing one tool to do both jobs badly.

Search playbook

The search indexes every attribute of 205 robots — names, manufacturers, categories, capabilities, sensors, connectivity, and AI stacks. Here is how to get the best results.

Query examples

The search indexes every attribute of all 205 robots — names, manufacturers, categories, capabilities, sensors, connectivity, and AI stacks.

Search for Example Finds
Robot nameOptimusTesla Optimus and similar names
ManufacturerUnitreeAll Unitree Robotics robots
CategoryhumanoidHumanoid category robots
Capabilityvoice interactionRobots with voice interaction
SensorLiDARRobots with LiDAR sensors
ProtocolMatterRobots supporting Matter

Price Sorting

No price filter in search? Sort results on the all robots page by price low-to-high or high-to-low.
1

Priority matching

Name matches rank highest, then manufacturer, then categories, sensors, and capabilities.

2

Cross-field matching

Multi-word queries match across fields — "Boston Dynamics quadruped" hits maker + category simultaneously.

3

Live refresh

Results update as you type with sub-second response — start broad, add specificity, watch the deck narrow.

4

Research workflow

Search → open 2–4 promising robots → compare finalists → check maker context.

Research strategies

The right search approach depends on your role and what decision you need to make. These strategies cover the most common research patterns.

Research strategies by role

Whether you are a consumer researching your first robot purchase, a journalist covering the robotics industry, an engineer evaluating competitive products, or an investor assessing market opportunities — the right search strategy depends on what signal you are tracking and what decision you need to make next.

First-time buyer

Start broad: try "cleaning robot" or "companion robot" for an overview of what is available. Review prices and features across multiple results, then narrow with specific terms like sensor types or brand names. The categories page has buyer guides with price ranges for each robot type to help set expectations.

Upgrading a robot

Search for features you wish your current robot had — "LiDAR navigation," "auto-empty," "voice control," or "obstacle avoidance." Compare your current model against candidates using the comparison tool to evaluate whether the upgrade justifies the cost. Pay attention to connectivity protocol changes — newer robots may use Matter instead of proprietary apps.

Tech enthusiast

Search cutting-edge terms: "bipedal locomotion," "force torque sensor," "large language model," or "ROS 2." Combine with status filters on the all robots page to distinguish currently available products from development-stage prototypes and pre-order models. The components directory provides deeper technical context on unfamiliar sensors and AI platforms.

Commercial buyer

Search deployment scenarios: "warehouse automation," "logistics," "reception desk," or "security patrol." Check manufacturer profiles for enterprise support options, fleet management capabilities, and commercial pricing arrangements for bulk deployments. Regional context matters — the countries directory shows production hubs and import considerations.

Research by technology

Search for component names like "LiDAR," "NVIDIA Jetson," "ROS 2," or "Matter" to find robots built on specific platforms. See the components directory for structured technology views and component trends for adoption momentum data over the past 30 days.

Research by use case

Search for the task rather than the product: "mopping," "lawn mowing," "security patrol," or "elderly care" surfaces robots designed for those applications. Cross-category queries like "security" can reveal surprising alternatives — dedicated security robots, companion robots with surveillance features, and quadrupeds with patrol capabilities all appear in one search.

Research by region

Search "Japan," "Chinese," or "European" to find robots from specific markets. The countries directory offers a structured geographic view with production hubs, manufacturer density, and regional market leaders for deeper comparison.

Complete research workflow

1

Explore categories

Understand the robotics landscape and identify which robot type matches your need.

2

Search candidates

Build a list of 3–5 promising results by name, capability, or sensor type.

3

Deep-dive profiles

Review full specifications, sensor breakdowns, and capability analysis on each candidate.

4

Compare finalists

Put top picks side by side with the comparison tool to highlight tradeoffs.

5

Research maker

Evaluate the company track record, portfolio breadth, and support infrastructure.

6

Check technology

Use the components directory to understand unfamiliar sensors, AI platforms, and connectivity protocols.

When to use search vs other tools

Use search when Use browse when
You know the robot name, maker, or a specific technology keywordYou need to understand the full market landscape first
You want fast results across the entire database in one queryYou want buyer guides with price ranges and recommendations
You are validating whether a specific sensor or protocol existsYou want to compare regional markets or manufacturer portfolios
You need shareable, bookmarkable result URLs for laterYou want structured side-by-side specification comparison

Cross-category discovery

One of the most valuable but underused search strategies is cross-category exploration. Searching across categories can reveal surprising alternatives you might not have considered:

  • Security needs? Searching "security" surfaces dedicated security robots, companion robots with surveillance features, quadrupeds with patrol capabilities, and cleaning robots with built-in cameras.
  • Specific sensor? Searching "camera" shows robots from every category that include cameras — from vacuums to humanoids to security bots — revealing technology adoption patterns across the market.
  • Budget comparison? Searching a price range or budget term can surface robots across categories that compete for the same spending decision, even if they serve different purposes.

Saving and sharing research

Bookmarkable URLs

Every search generates a permanent URL. Bookmark it, share it with colleagues, or paste it into a team chat — the same URL always shows the latest data for that query.

Multi-device research

Start on your laptop, continue on your phone. Search URLs work everywhere. Open candidate detail pages in parallel tabs for efficient comparison across devices.

Compare integration

Once your shortlist is small enough, move directly to the comparison tool for structured spec-by-spec analysis. The compare page also supports shareable URLs for team purchase decisions.

Search help

The practical questions people hit most often once they start narrowing the shortlist.

Frequently Asked Questions

What can I search for on ui44?
You can search across all 205 robots by name, manufacturer, category, capability, sensor type, connectivity option, or any keyword that appears in a robot's profile. The search indexes every attribute in the database for comprehensive results.
Why am I getting no results?
If your search returns no results, try simplifying your query. Use single keywords rather than phrases, check for typos, and try synonyms (e.g., "vacuum" instead of "cleaning robot"). You can also browse by category or manufacturer.
Can I filter search results by price?
The search page does not include a numerical price filter, but you can use the all robots page which offers category, manufacturer, and price sorting together.
Do search results update in real time?
Yes, results update as you type with a short debounce delay to balance responsiveness with efficiency. There is no need to press Enter or click a search button — just start typing and results appear automatically. You can also press Enter or click Search for an immediate update. The result cards are rendered server-side and delivered via HTMX partial updates, meaning only the search results section refreshes without disturbing the rest of the page.
How is search relevance determined?
Results are ranked by match quality across multiple data dimensions. The relevance algorithm prioritizes exact matches in high-importance fields — a robot name match ranks higher than a description mention, which ranks higher than a sensor or capability match. Multi-word queries are evaluated as a combined search, matching across any combination of fields. For example, searching "Boston Dynamics quadruped" surfaces robots from Boston Dynamics in the quadruped category.
Can I search by technical specifications?
Yes — search for specific sensor names, connectivity protocols, AI platforms, or capability keywords. For example, searching for "LiDAR" returns all robots that include LiDAR sensors, while "Matter" surfaces robots supporting the Matter smart home protocol. For structured technical browsing, the components directory provides dedicated pages for each technology with complete robot compatibility lists and detailed technical explanations.
Does search include robots not yet available for purchase?
Yes, the search indexes every robot in the database regardless of availability status. Results include robots that are Available, in Pre-order, in Development, and in Prototype stages. Each result card displays the robot's current status so you can quickly identify which results represent products you can buy today versus those still in development. To limit results to only purchasable robots, use the status filter tabs on the all robots page.
How often is the search data updated?
The search index is rebuilt whenever the database is updated, ensuring that new robots, updated specifications, and changed prices are immediately searchable without delay. Each robot detail page shows a "last verified" date so you can assess data freshness for any specific result. Available products are prioritized for frequent verification, ensuring that purchase-ready robots have the most current information.
Can I share or bookmark my search results?
Yes, every search query generates a shareable URL that preserves your exact search terms and results. You can bookmark searches to revisit later, share specific search results with colleagues evaluating robots together, or save a set of search URLs as a lightweight research project. The URL-based approach ensures your research is reproducible — the same URL always shows the latest data.
What is the best way to narrow down search results?
Start with a broad term and progressively add specificity. For example, typing "robot" shows everything, adding "cleaning" narrows to cleaning robots, and adding a manufacturer name further refines to that company's products. You can also combine search with other tools — identify candidates through search, then use the comparison tool to evaluate your shortlist side by side across all specification dimensions.
Should I use search or browse to find robots?
Use search when you have a specific keyword, name, manufacturer, or technology in mind — it is the fastest way to surface candidates from the entire database in one action. Use browse routes when you need market context: the categories page for understanding robot types and buyer guides, the manufacturers page for company-level research, and the comparison tool for final tradeoff analysis. Most effective research workflows use both: search to discover, browse to contextualize.
Can I search by price range?
Direct price-range filtering is not available in search. However, you can search by category (e.g., "cleaning robot") to see the full price spread, then sort by price on the all robots page for structured price browsing. Many category pages also include price distribution tables showing typical price ranges for budget, mid-range, and premium segments within that robot type.
How do I compare robots after searching?
Once your search results narrow to a manageable shortlist, open the most promising 2–4 robots in separate tabs and review their full detail pages. Then use the comparison tool to place up to 4 robots side by side across every specification dimension — price, sensors, capabilities, connectivity, battery life, dimensions, and AI stack. The comparison view highlights differences that are hard to spot across separate detail pages.
Does search work on mobile?
Yes, search is fully responsive and works on mobile, tablet, and desktop. On smaller screens, the search input is prominently placed at the top of the page, result cards stack vertically for easy scrolling, and all quick-start tags and category chips remain tappable. Every search generates a bookmarkable URL, so you can start research on your phone and continue on your laptop without losing context.
How do I find robots from a specific country?
You can search by country name or nationality — "Japan," "Chinese," "Korean," or "German" will surface robots from manufacturers based in those regions. For a structured geographic view, the countries directory provides dedicated pages for each manufacturing hub, including manufacturer counts, product portfolios, and regional market positioning. Country pages also show production trends and highlight leading manufacturers in each region.
Can I search by robot status (available, pre-order, development)?
The search indexes status labels, so searching for "available," "pre-order," "development," or "prototype" will surface robots matching that status. However, for more structured status filtering, use the status filter tabs on the all robots page, which lets you toggle between Available, Pre-order, Development, and Prototype robots while maintaining category and manufacturer filters. Status information on each robot profile includes a last verified date so you can assess how current the availability data is.
What data does each search result card show?
Each result card displays the robot name, manufacturer (linked to the manufacturer profile), category, a short description, the price (or price note if TBD), and match labels showing which fields matched your query (Name, Maker, Category, Capability, Sensor, or AI). Clicking any result opens the full robot detail page with complete specifications, sensor breakdowns, capability analysis, component details, and manufacturer context.
How do I research a specific technology like LiDAR or Matter?
Search for the technology name directly — "LiDAR," "Matter," "ROS 2," "NVIDIA Jetson," or "Bluetooth 5.0" will return all robots that include that technology. For deeper technical context, the components directory provides dedicated pages for each technology with explanations, adoption statistics, and complete robot compatibility lists. You can also check component trends to see which technologies are gaining or losing adoption across the market over the past 30 days.
What is the difference between search and the all robots page?
The search page is optimized for keyword-based discovery across the entire database — type any term and get instant results from all robots. It indexes every attribute including names, manufacturers, categories, capabilities, sensors, connectivity protocols, and AI platforms. The all robots page is a structured directory with sortable columns, category filters, manufacturer filters, status tabs, and price sorting. Use search when you have a keyword in mind; use the robots page when you want to browse, filter, and sort a structured table view. Both routes link to the same robot detail pages for deep specification analysis.

Keep the research moving

Need a different lens than raw keyword search?

Search is the fastest way to surface candidates. Once the problem becomes breadth, tradeoffs, or manufacturer context, switch tools on purpose instead of endlessly refining one query.