AGIBOT unveils new embodied AI robots and models to push real-world deployment

Shanghai, April 17, 2026 — AGIBOT announced a new generation of embodied AI products and foundation models at its 2026 Partner Conference, positioning its latest robots and software as a step toward large-scale, real-world deployment of physical AI.
Framed around the company’s “One Robotic Body, Three Intelligences” full-stack architecture, the releases include new robotic platforms and AI models intended to link advances in large models with reliable hardware and real-world data. The company said the goal is to shift embodied AI from demonstrations to measurable outcomes across industrial, commercial and service environments.
“Embodied intelligence is no longer a concept, it is becoming a new form of productive infrastructure,” said Peng Zhihui, AGIBOT’s co-founder, president and chief technology officer. Among the hardware highlights, the AGIBOT A3 humanoid robot is designed for interactive environments such as entertainment, education and customer engagement.
Standing 173 centimeters and weighing 55 kilograms, it uses magnesium, titanium and TPU materials and is specified with a 0.218 kW/kg power-to-weight ratio.
The A3 features a 10-hour endurance, a 10-second battery swap, centimeter-level ultra-wideband swarm positioning for synchronized performances with up to 100 robots, shoulder tactile sensing and 360-degree multi-array microphones with full-direction audio capture for enhanced interaction.
The AGIBOT G2 Air is a compact single-arm mobile manipulator built for light-duty, human-in-the-loop work. It offers seven degrees of freedom, a 3-kilogram payload, a 750–800 millimeter reach, a sub-800 millimeter width and speeds of 1.5 meters per second.
Optimized for human–robot collaboration in retail, hospitality, logistics and structured industrial workflows, G2 Air unifies task execution and data collection in one workflow, enabling real-time data capture during operations. Built on a UMI-isomorphic layout, it is designed to align egocentric with real-machine data.
The company said its zero-radius turning and “agile, swift, compact” design allow operation in tight spaces, with a stated upgrade path from assisted operation to full autonomy. AGIBOT also introduced OmniHand 3 Ultra-T, part of its new Omni 3 series of dexterous robotic hands.
The tendon-driven system provides 22+3 degrees of freedom in a lightweight, approximately 500-gram design with a 10:1 load-to-weight ratio. It integrates full-hand 3D tactile sensing and a palm camera for more complex manipulation tasks, according to the company.
AGIBOT presented the lineup as evidence that embodied AI is moving from lab prototypes to practical tools on factory floors and in customer-facing settings. The company said new models and data pipelines are intended to help its robots learn from real-world tasks and improve over time.
It emphasized that the platforms are designed to protect customer investment as AI capabilities evolve, with options to progress from assisted to more autonomous operation. The announcements underscore growing industry efforts to turn advances in generative and multimodal AI into physical systems that can perform useful work in the field.
AGIBOT said it is focusing on deployment across entertainment, retail, industrial operations and field inspection as it scales its embodied AI ecosystem.
