AGIBOT’s latest milestone is a reminder that the robotics race is leaving the demo stage and moving onto the factory floor.
The company said its 15,000th robot, an AGIBOT G2 built for industrial tasks, has rolled off the assembly line. The milestone comes as embodied AI companies try to prove they can not only build impressive machines, but also manufacture them consistently and deploy them in real workplaces.
For robotics companies, the next challenge is not just building machines that look capable in a video. It is building enough of them, shipping them into real work settings, and proving they can keep performing after the demo ends.
AGIBOT’s factory push gains scale
AGIBOT called the milestone a sign of progress toward larger-scale deployment of embodied AI systems. The company said the achievement reflects its work across robot design, manufacturing, software-hardware integration, and on-site deployment.
“The rollout of our 15,000th robot is not only an important milestone in AGIBOT’s mass production and engineering delivery capabilities but also a reflection of the broader industry’s move toward scaled deployment in real-world settings,” said Dr. Yao Maoqing, President of AGIBOT’s embodied AI business unit.
According to The Robot Report, the milestone unit was the AGIBOT G2, a wheeled mobile manipulator with a humanoid torso and arms designed for industrial tasks. AGIBOT’s product lineup also includes humanoid robots, quadrupeds, dexterous systems, and commercial cleaning systems.
Founded in 2023, AGIBOT develops robots and AI systems for physical work environments. The company describes its architecture as a system that combines locomotion, interaction, and manipulation, which are all needed for robots to move, handle objects, and work around people.
Production ramps up
AGIBOT’s production pace has accelerated quickly.
The company said it took about a year to grow from 1,000 to 5,000 units, while the jump from 5,000 to 10,000 units took three months. It has now pushed that total to 15,000 units.
Humanoids Daily noted that the 10,000-unit milestone was reached in March 2026 and that the move to 15,000 units points to a faster manufacturing ramp. The report said the latest phase was being tested through factory livestream operations at Longcheer Technology’s tablet manufacturing plant.
The Robot Report said AGIBOT recently completed about 100 cumulative hours of factory livestream operations featuring the G2. During those operations, the robot performed tablet quality inspections in line with factory production rhythms and worked alongside human line workers.
That detail gives the milestone more practical weight.
Factory work is repetitive, fast, and less forgiving than a staged demo. Robots need to handle real production rhythms, safety requirements, and unexpected issues without slowing down the line.
The test moves to real work
The 15,000-unit milestone also lands as humanoid and embodied AI companies compete to show commercial progress. According to Omdia data cited by AGIBOT and The Robot Report, AGIBOT ranked first globally in humanoid robot shipments and market share in 2025, with 5,168 units shipped and a 39% market share.
AGIBOT said competition in robotics is shifting from single-robot demonstrations and proof-of-concept projects to scaled production, batch delivery, and real-world applications. The company also highlighted that sustained deployment will depend on reliable supply, repeatable manufacturing, and the ability to deliver robots into working environments.
The milestone does not answer every question about embodied AI. Companies still need to demonstrate long-term reliability, cost-effectiveness, safety, and usefulness across different workplaces.
AGIBOT’s 15,000th robot shows where the robotics race is heading next. The companies that stand out may not be the ones with the flashiest demos, but the ones that can build robots consistently and make them useful on the floor.


