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Top Robots and Humanoids Trending Right Now

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Humanoid robots used to feel like something you’d only see in lab demos or sci-fi movies. Now they’re walking factory floors, lifting boxes in warehouses, and showing up in places that matter. 

What’s changed isn’t just better hardware, but also smarter AI and serious investment behind it. Still, not every humanoid making headlines is ready for practical work. Some are still carefully polished concepts, while others are already being tested or deployed. 

Here’s our rundown of the top robots and humanoids trending in 2026.

Tesla Optimus Gen 2: Best for general-purpose humanoid automation

The Tesla Optimus Gen 2 is built around a clear goal: creating a general-purpose, bipedal humanoid capable of handling repetitive or mundane tasks. Instead of targeting a single role, Tesla is positioning Optimus as a flexible system that can operate across various environments, including factories, warehouses, and spaces built for humans. 

Making a humanoid like Optimus Gen 2 work requires more than just hardware. Tesla is developing the software stacks that handle balance, navigation, perception, and interaction with the physical world. This humanoid uses the advantages of deep learning, computer vision, motion planning, and control. For its hardware, Optimus Gen 2 features improved actuators and sensors that allow for more precise object manipulation. 

Tesla’s Optimus Gen 2 tackles the jobs people don’t want to do, from unsafe work to repetitive and boring tasks. Source: Tesla

Boston Dynamics Electric Atlas: Best for advanced mobility and dexterity

Boston Dynamics’ Electric Atlas aims to expand the capabilities of humanoid robots in movement and interaction with their surroundings. This humanoid robot is designed for environments where flexibility and precision matter, showcasing advanced mobility for handling tasks usually reserved for human workers. 

Atlas is the result of decades of robotics research and real-world testing. Its humanoid form allows for smooth walking, strong lifting, and precise manipulation in spaces made for people. That mobility enables Atlas to perform material handling tasks without requiring companies to redesign their workspaces for robots. Atlas also combines dexterity with smart autonomy, supporting tasks like barcode scanning and material handling with minimal supervision. When Atlas learns a new skill, that ability can be shared across an entire fleet, allowing improvements to grow quickly through AI training.

Boston Dynamics’ fully autonomous Atlas handles precision tasks in real warehouse and manufacturing environments. Source: Boston Dynamics

Agility Robotics Digit: Best for real-world warehouse deployment

Agility Robotics Digit is built for warehouse and logistics environments, where humanoid robots are expected to perform consistently over long shifts. Instead of focusing on showcase demos, Digit is built to support daily operations in manufacturing and fulfillment centers, helping simplify workflows and address labor shortages. 

Digit operates autonomously and is managed through Agility’s cloud-based fleet system, Arc, which supports multi-shift operation with scheduled breaks for autonomous docking and charging. The robot adapts to changing site needs through customizable end effectors and workflow integrations with existing automation systems. Technically, this humanoid robot combines traditional controls with AI-driven perception, navigation, and planning to move materials safely and reliably.

Agility Robotics’ Digit meets strict OSHA safety standards for deployment in regulated industrial environments. Source: Agility Robotics

Figure AI Figure 03: Best for AI-driven reasoning and adaptability

Figure AI emphasizes reasoning, which sets it apart from many other humanoid robots. Rather than relying on tightly scripted behaviors, Figure 03 is designed to learn from people and adapt to new tasks through Helix, the company’s vision-language-action AI system. 

To support that approach, Figure rebuilt both the hardware and software from the ground up. Figure 03 features an upgraded vision system with higher frame rates and lower latency than its predecessor, and a wider field of view, designed for more responsive navigation and manipulation in homes or workplaces. Its redesigned hands include tactile sensing and embedded cameras, allowing more stable, adaptive grasps across a wide range of objects. 

Figure 03 also includes an improved audio hardware system with a larger, more powerful speaker and microphones, enabling clearer, real-time speech interaction.

Figure AI’s Figure 03 features upgraded audio hardware for natural, real-time speech interactions. Source: Figure AI

Unitree Robotics G1: Best for agility and accessibility

Unitree Robotics G1 is designed to focus on movement, flexibility, and accessibility, offering a different take on what a humanoid robot can be. Rather than focusing first on heavy industrial deployment, G1 highlights agility and dynamic motion. This makes Unitree’s G1 humanoid agent one of the most visually striking humanoids currently in development. 

G1 features a wide range of joint movement, powered by up to 43 joint motors, enabling complex, highly dynamic motion beyond that of typical humanoid robots. That flexibility is paired with imitation and reinforcement learning, allowing the robot to refine its coordination through AI-driven training. The humanoid robot also includes force-control dexterous hands for precise object manipulation, along with a sensing stack that combines 3D LiDAR, depth cameras, and a microphone array.

Unitree Robotics’ G1 humanoid robot combines agility and accessibility for dynamic task performance across diverse environments. Source: Unitree

Bottom line: Humanoid robots are moving from demos to deployment

The humanoid robots trending right now reflect a shift in the industry: from focusing solely on impressive demos, companies are prioritizing real-world usefulness, adaptability, and scale. From general-purpose systems like Tesla Optimus to agility-driven platforms like Unitree G1, the emphasis is increasingly on robots that can operate reliably in environments built for humans. 

While challenges around autonomy, safety, and cost remain, we’re moving closer to seeing these robots actually deployed in factories, warehouses, and beyond.

To see which humanoid robots are helping move the industry forward, check out our latest roundup of humanoid robots redefining how you work and live

The post Top Robots and Humanoids Trending Right Now appeared first on eWEEK.

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