Agibot Launches Three Humanoid Robots, Quadruped; Ships 5,000 Units
- tech360.tv
- 1 day ago
- 3 min read
Agibot introduced three humanoid robots and one quadruped robot for the U.S. market at CES in Las Vegas. The company announced it has already shipped 5,000 robots to customers.

The launch includes the A2 full-size humanoid for front-of-house tasks like guided tours, reception duties, and corporate showrooms. The X2 is a smaller humanoid aimed at performances, demonstrations, education, and marketing events.
The G2 is an industrial humanoid robot designed for assembly lines and warehouse parcel sorting. Agibot also released the D1, a quadruped robot built for outdoor mobility, patrol, and load-carrying support.
Dr. Yao Maoqing, Agibot’s senior vice president and president, stated that bringing the full robotics portfolio to CES marks a defining moment for the company. He added it demonstrates how Agibot can build an ecosystem of humanoid robots to serve people across industries, environments, and everyday life.
Agibot considers this a commercial launch, showcasing a transition from research and development to a full portfolio of mass-produced humanoids. The company says these robots are already deployed at scale in real-world operations.

The A2 humanoid is a bipedal robot intended for customer service or front desk reception duties, not heavy physical labour. It stands 169 centimetres tall and weighs 69 kilograms.
The A2 features a 700 w/h quick-swap battery, providing a two-hour run-time, and has 40 degrees of freedom. It boasts a 60-centimetre turning radius and integrates a large language model.
This robot can be trained on specific company or marketing information and offers L4-level autonomous mobility. Its sensors include 360-degree LIDAR and six high-definition cameras, complemented by a face screen, microphone, and speaker.
The G2 is Agibot’s industrial humanoid robot for factory and logistics work, featuring wheels and sophisticated arms and hands for challenging tasks. Its height is variable, ranging from 1.2 to 1.8 metres, and it weighs 185 kilograms.
It has a total battery capacity of 1,652 w/h via dual hot-swappable batteries for continuous operation, also offering pass-through charging and return-to-base charging. The G2 provides a four-hour runtime without recharging and has 26 degrees of freedom.
The G2’s arms feature seven degrees of freedom with human-like wrists and joint-torque sensing, capable of carrying 5 kilograms per arm. Optional dextrous hands offer up to 19 degrees of freedom, tactile sensing, and quick-swap capability.
The robot includes two LIDAR cameras, stereo cameras, and wrist cameras, moving at 1.5 metres per second. It has a three-degrees-of-freedom waist, folding and lifting legs, a face screen, microphone, and speaker.
Connectivity options for the G2 include WiFi, 4G/5G, Bluetooth, and NFC. It has an IP42 water resistance rating for the body and IP50 for the arm.
The X2 series is a playtime robot built for human interaction, capable of dancing and simulating fighting. It measures 1.3 metres high and weighs 35 kilograms.
The X2 has 25 degrees of freedom and touch sensors to react to human engagement. The base model does not include LIDAR but comes with a handheld controller, also supporting autonomous navigation and obstacle avoidance.
The D1 is Agibot’s quadruped or dog-like robot, designed to navigate harsh terrain at approximately 3.7 metres per second. It can climb stairs, jump, and carry up to 8 kilograms.
The D1 can be used for guard duty or search and rescue operations.
Agibot states these robots are already operational across eight core commercial applications. These include reception, entertainment, manufacturing, logistics sorting, security inspections, data collection, and scientific research.
The company is not releasing pricing information. Agibot stated there is no fixed price for each robot, as configurations vary by use case and deployment.
Agibot launched three humanoid robots (A2, X2, G2) and one quadruped robot (D1) for the U.S. market at CES.
The company has already shipped 5,000 robots to customers.
The robots are designed for a range of applications, including customer service, industrial tasks, entertainment, and outdoor mobility.
Source: FORBES
