Robotic
UniX AI’s Panther: The World’s First Service Humanoid Robot Enters Your Home
UniX AI has begun global deliveries of Panther, its third-generation wheeled dual-arm humanoid robot — marking what the company calls the world’s first service humanoid to enter real household deployment, backed by 100+ monthly shipments and three proprietary AI systems.
For decades, the humanoid robot lived in one of two places: the research lab or the factory floor. The idea of one quietly rolling into your kitchen to make tea — on its own, without a handler nearby — seemed like something reserved for science fiction or at least the next decade. As of April 2026, that line has been crossed. UniX AI, a Suzhou-based robotics company founded just two years ago, has begun global deliveries of its third-generation wheeled dual-arm humanoid robot, the Panther — and it is heading into real homes.
Not Bipedal — And That’s the Point
The dominant conversation in humanoid robotics has been obsessively focused on legs. Boston Dynamics, Figure AI, Tesla Optimus, Unitree — all are racing to perfect bipedal locomotion, betting that two legs are what give a robot the versatility to thrive in human environments. UniX AI is making a different bet. Panther runs on an omnidirectional four-wheel steering and four-wheel drive (4WS+4WD) chassis, giving it smooth, agile movement across virtually any indoor surface without the instability risks and energy overhead of walking upright.
Standing at a height that allows its upper body to lift up to 80 cm vertically, Panther can reach countertops, open cabinets, and operate at ground level — a surprisingly underappreciated constraint for home service robots. The wheeled base isn’t a concession; it’s a design philosophy. UniX AI argues that for the environments where service robots will actually be deployed — hotels, homes, retail floors, hospitals — wheels deliver higher reliability and more consistent performance than legs in 2026.
The Hardware: 34 Joints and the World’s First Mass-Produced 8-DoF Bionic Arms
Where Panther really pushes boundaries is in its arms. The robot features 34 high-DoF joints, including what UniX AI claims are the world’s first mass-produced 8-DoF bionic arms paired with adaptive intelligent grippers. Eight degrees of freedom per arm — versus the five or six common in competing platforms — means Panther’s arms can reach, rotate, and position with far greater subtlety. That matters when the task is pouring a cup of tea, not just moving a box.
The robot is powered by a 48V platform that delivers enhanced stability for explosive movements and high-speed control — the kind of power budget that enables the arm to execute a precise pour without overshooting, or grip a fragile object without crushing it. These aren’t demo capabilities; UniX AI demonstrated them live at the Morgan Stanley China Summit 2026 in late March, where Panther completed a fully autonomous tea-making process in front of a room full of investors.
The Brain: Three Proprietary AI Systems
Behind Panther’s physical capabilities is a software trinity that UniX AI developed entirely in-house:
- UniFlex — handles cross-scenario task generalization and imitation learning, allowing the robot to adapt behaviors across diverse environments without being reprogrammed from scratch.
- UniTouch — integrates visuo-tactile multimodal models, giving the robot the ability to feel and see simultaneously, enabling precise manipulation of objects with widely varying textures and weights.
- UniCortex — provides long-term task planning for complex, multi-step workflows, letting Panther sequence actions like “fetch the cup, fill it, carry it to the table” without human intervention at each step.
Together, these systems embody what UniX AI calls a “deployment-first” philosophy: real intelligence comes from real-world data, collected by robots that are actually working in the field, not just running in simulation.
Already Shipping at Scale
What makes Panther particularly significant is that UniX AI isn’t announcing a prototype — they’re announcing deliveries. Since 2025, the company has been producing and shipping more than 100 units per month, making it one of the few embodied intelligence companies in the world achieving triple-digit monthly production. The company has hundreds of millions of yuan in orders on hand and is targeting a monthly delivery rate of 1,000 units.
Panther’s predecessor, the Wanda 2.0, is already deployed and operating in hotels, security patrols, and retail food service. Panther represents the next step: a platform capable enough and refined enough to operate in the unpredictability of private residences. That is a meaningfully higher bar.
Why This Inflection Point Matters
The robotics industry has spent years talking about the “home robot” as a distant aspiration. What UniX AI has done — quietly, without the marketing fanfare of a Figure or a Tesla — is actually build one and start shipping it. The Panther is not perfect, and residential deployment will surface new failure modes that lab testing never anticipated. But the first robots to enter homes in volume will accumulate data, improve rapidly, and build the trust with consumers that later entrants will have to work much harder to earn.
Fred Yang, UniX AI’s founder and CEO — born in 2000, a computer science graduate of the University of Michigan who left a Yale PhD program to build this company — framed it clearly at the Morgan Stanley summit: “Embodied intelligence is evolving from sci-tech innovation into social infrastructure.” The Panther is his argument that this transition is already underway.
For those tracking the arc of the humanoid era, April 2026 is turning out to be a month of arrivals. Not just of robots into factories and research labs — but into kitchens, living rooms, and homes. The domestic robot has, at last, left the drawing board.
InteliDroid will continue tracking UniX AI’s deployment progress as Panther scales globally.
Robotic
Pentagon Awards $24M to Humanoid Robot Startup for Battlefield Testing
Foundation Future Industries has secured $24 million in Pentagon contracts to develop and test its Phantom MK-1 humanoid robot for military applications — already field-tested in Ukraine and targeting 10,000 units in 2026.
When most people think of humanoid robots, they picture warehouse logistics or car assembly lines. But a fresh $24 million from the Pentagon is pointing these bipedal machines toward a far more consequential frontier: the battlefield.
Foundation Future Industries and the Phantom MK-1
San Francisco-based startup Foundation Future Industries has secured $24 million in research contracts from the U.S. Department of Defense, spread across Army, Navy, and Air Force programs, to develop and test its Phantom MK-1 humanoid robot for military applications. The contracts include an SBIR Phase III pathway — a mechanism that can accelerate federally funded technology directly into commercialization, bypassing traditional procurement timelines.
The Phantom MK-1 is designed for rugged, real-world deployment. It walks at 1.7 meters per second, carries a 44-pound payload, and relies on eight cameras rather than bulky LiDAR sensors for environmental awareness. Its proprietary cycloidal actuators deliver up to 160 newton-meters of torque, giving it the strength and precision needed to operate in complex, unstructured environments. The unit is priced at approximately $150,000, with a lease model available at $100,000 per year — making it far more accessible than many defense robotics programs of the past.
Already Tested in a Live Conflict Zone
Foundation didn’t wait for contract ink to dry before putting the Phantom MK-1 to the test. Two units were deployed to Ukraine in February 2026 for logistics and reconnaissance missions — real-world evaluation under conditions no lab can simulate. The battlefield feedback directly shaped the design of the upcoming MK-2, which features waterproofing, a larger battery pack, increased payload capacity of 175 pounds, consolidated electronics to reduce short-circuit risk, and cast-moulded bodywork to speed manufacturing and cut costs.
This kind of iterative, combat-informed development cycle is unusual in the defense robotics space, where most programs proceed through years of simulated testing before any real-world deployment. Foundation’s approach — deploy early, learn fast — mirrors the methodology that has made commercial humanoid robot programs so effective in manufacturing environments.
Ambitious Production Targets
Foundation’s production roadmap is aggressive. The company targeted 40 units in 2025, aims for 10,000 units in 2026, and projects 50,000 units by end of 2027, with a steady-state manufacturing rate of 30,000 per year. If those numbers hold, this would represent one of the fastest hardware scale-ups in defense robotics history — and would put the Phantom MK-1 in a production tier comparable to some of the leading commercial humanoid programs.
The contracts also arrive amid a broader U.S. push to counter China’s rapidly expanding humanoid robotics industry. Chinese companies like Unitree, Agibot, and UBTECH have been setting new shipment records in 2026, and the Defense Department is clearly aware that robotics leadership carries significant strategic implications beyond the factory floor.
Political Controversy and What It Means for the Industry
The deal hasn’t been without controversy. Eric Trump, son of President Donald Trump, serves as Foundation’s chief strategy adviser, prompting Senator Elizabeth Warren to call the contracts “corruption in plain sight.” The optics of a Trump family member’s company receiving a $24 million federal contract during the Trump administration have generated significant political pushback.
Regardless of the political noise, the technical and strategic dimensions of this story are significant. Humanoid robots are moving beyond their initial commercial applications and entering sectors that will fundamentally reshape how nations think about workforce automation — including, now, the military. Whether or not any given program succeeds, the fact that the Pentagon is actively funding bipedal humanoid research signals that this technology is being taken seriously at the highest levels of defense planning.
The Bigger Picture for Humanoid Robotics
The Phantom MK-1 story is a microcosm of where the humanoid robotics industry finds itself in 2026: multiple competing programs, aggressive deployment timelines, real-world data replacing lab simulations, and a growing recognition that the applications for these machines extend far beyond what the industry imagined just a few years ago. From BMW assembly lines to Ukrainian logistics missions, humanoid robots are no longer a future promise — they are a present-tense investment that governments and corporations are betting on right now.
At InteliDroid, we’ll be watching Foundation Future Industries closely as the MK-2 enters testing and production targets come due. The intersection of humanoid robotics and defense may prove to be one of the most consequential — and contested — chapters in this technology’s evolution.
InteliDroid Feature
Honor’s ‘Lightning’ Smashes the Human Half-Marathon World Record in Beijing
On April 19, 2026, Honor’s humanoid robot ‘Lightning’ completed the Beijing E-Town Half Marathon in 50 minutes and 26 seconds — nearly seven minutes faster than the standing human world record — signaling a new era for athletic robotics.
On April 19, 2026, something unprecedented happened on the streets of Beijing’s E-Town industrial district: a humanoid robot crossed a half-marathon finish line faster than any human being ever has. Honor’s bright-red android, nicknamed “Lightning,” completed the 21-kilometer course in just 50 minutes and 26 seconds — shaving nearly seven minutes off the human world record set by Uganda’s Jacob Kiplimo. The era of robots outrunning humanity has arrived, and it arrived at a sprint.
A Race Like No Other
The Beijing E-Town 2026 Humanoid Robot Half-Marathon drew a staggering 112 competing teams, including five international squads, making it the largest robot racing event in history. The course wound through E-Town’s wide, modern boulevards — a symbolic choice given the district’s role as a hub for China’s booming robotics industry. Roughly 40 percent of the participating robots navigated the course entirely autonomously, relying on onboard sensors and AI rather than remote human operators. The remaining teams used teleoperation, but it was the self-navigating machines that dominated the top of the leaderboard.
Honor’s robots didn’t just win — they swept the podium. All three top finishers were Honor humanoids running under full autonomous control. The runner-up clocked in at approximately 51 minutes, and the third-place finisher came in at around 53 minutes. Every medal went to a machine that made its own decisions in real time, reacting to the course without a human hand on the controls.
The Engineering Behind Lightning
Lightning’s design is a deliberate study in biomechanics. Honor’s engineers modeled the robot after elite human distance runners, giving it legs roughly 95 centimeters long — proportions that maximize stride length and ground clearance. The chassis houses a proprietary liquid-cooling system developed largely in-house, a critical engineering choice that prevented the kind of thermal throttling that has caused other robots to slow or fail mid-race.
The autonomous navigation stack integrates real-time environmental mapping with a gait controller tuned for continuous forward propulsion — a very different problem from the stop-and-start manipulation tasks most industrial humanoids are designed for. Sustaining 25 km/h over 21 kilometers demands not just speed but energy management, predictive path planning, and robust fault tolerance. Lightning delivered on all of them.
What Honor’s Win Means for the Industry
Honor’s entry into humanoid robotics might seem surprising for a company best known as a smartphone maker — a Huawei spin-off that until recently focused entirely on consumer electronics. But the company has been quietly building hardware and AI expertise, and Sunday’s result suggests that adjacent-industry players are serious competitors in the humanoid space. This is not just a novelty win; it’s a demonstration of full-system integration at a level that established robotics firms will need to reckon with.
The broader significance goes beyond any single company. The Beijing race result reinforces a trend that has been building across 2026: humanoid robots are moving from controlled lab environments into real-world performance contexts where they must contend with uneven surfaces, crowds, and unpredictable conditions. The fact that 40 percent of robots ran autonomously — and that the podium was swept by self-navigating machines — reflects how rapidly the underlying AI has matured.
For context, the human half-marathon world record stood for years as a benchmark of elite athletic performance. That a humanoid robot has now surpassed it — not with wheels or tracks, but on two legs with a gait designed to mirror human running mechanics — is a milestone that resonates far beyond the robotics community.
Looking Ahead
The Beijing race is likely to become an annual proving ground, and next year’s field will be even larger and faster. With companies like Honor, Unitree, and dozens of Chinese and international startups competing, the pace of improvement is relentless. For anyone tracking the humanoid robotics space, the message from April 19 is clear: the machines aren’t just catching up to human physical capability — in some domains, they’re already ahead.
At InteliDroid, we’ll be watching closely as these racing platforms cross-pollinate with industrial and commercial deployments. The same autonomous navigation and thermal management that won a half-marathon today could be managing warehouse logistics or emergency response scenarios tomorrow.
InteliDroid Feature
Deployment Year One: AGIBOT’s Industrial Embodied AI, Tesla Optimus Dexterity, and 1X NEO Consumer Push
AGIBOT deploys embodied AI in factories, Tesla patents Optimus V3 dexterity breakthroughs, 1X NEO opens home robot preorders—humanoid robotics accelerates toward real-world service droid applications. #humanoidrobot #AIrobotics #InteliDroid
The humanoid robotics landscape is shifting from prototypes to production at an unprecedented pace. AGIBOT’s declaration of 2026 as “Deployment Year One” for embodied AI, coupled with Tesla’s latest Optimus hand patents and 1X Technologies’ consumer-ready NEO, signals a dual-track acceleration: industrial might meeting household utility. humanoid robot, AI robotics, InteliDroid, service droid, embodied AI.
AGIBOT Accelerates Real-World Embodied AI Deployment
At its 2026 Partner Conference, AGIBOT unveiled a suite of next-generation platforms including the A3 humanoid, G2 Air mobile manipulator, and D2 Max quadruped, all unified under a “One Robotic Body, Three Intelligences” architecture. This marks the world’s first large-scale industrial deployment of embodied AI in consumer electronics manufacturing, partnering with Longcheer Technology for precision assembly lines.
China’s humanoid ecosystem is booming, with over 300 robots set for the second national half-marathon—testing endurance on tougher terrain. These milestones underscore embodied AI‘s transition from lab to factory floor, where InteliDroid envisions service droids excelling in dexterous, adaptive tasks for household and business applications.
Tesla Optimus V3: Tendon-Driven Mastery of Manipulation
Tesla’s new patents reveal Optimus V3’s hand and arm: a mechanically actuated, tendon-driven design relocating actuators to the forearm for human-like dexterity. With production slated for late 2026 at 1M units/year, and Optimus 3 already walking autonomously in offices, Tesla is repurposing auto lines for robots powered by its FSD AI stack.
This breakthrough in dexterous manipulation—essential for humanoid robot service in professional settings—aligns with InteliDroid’s platform vision.
1X NEO: Consumer Humanoids Arrive with Transparent Pricing
1X Technologies opened preorders for NEO, the first consumer-ready home humanoid, promising 2026 delivery. Controlled via voice or app, NEO lifts 150lbs, carries 55lbs, and prioritizes safe collaboration in residences—perfect for eldercare and household chores.
InteliDroid’s advanced AI robotics complements such platforms, enabling versatile service droid deployments.
The Path Forward for Humanoid Service Droids
Boston Dynamics’ Spot integration with DeepMind for conversational inspections further blurs lines between specialized and generalist robots. As these technologies mature, InteliDroid positions itself as the thought leader in embodied AI for practical, scalable applications across homes, businesses, and industries.
- Artificial Intelligence3 weeks ago
Meet Roadrunner: The RAI Hybrid That Swaps Between Legs and Wheels Zero-Shot
- Robotic2 weeks ago
Unitree H1 Hits 10 m/s: Humanoid Robot Closes In on Usain Bolt’s World-Record Pace
- Robotic3 weeks ago
KAIST’s Humanoid v0.7 Sprints, Moonwalks, and Kicks Its Way Into the Physical AI Era
- InteliDroid Feature2 weeks ago
The Robot Reality Check: What the Beijing Half-Marathon and Stanford’s 2026 AI Report Reveal
- Robotic3 weeks ago
Unitree’s H2 Humanoid Begins North American Shipments at $29,900 as the Company Files for a $610M IPO
- Humanoid Robots6 days ago
China Leads the Charge: Agibot, Unitree, and UBTECH Set Humanoid Shipment Records
- Robotic2 weeks ago
Amazon Enters the Humanoid Robot Market With Its Acquisition of Fauna Robotics
- Humanoid Robots6 days ago
Tesla Optimus Production Accelerates: Mass Deployment of Humanoid Robots Nears