Chinese AGIBOT closed a symbolic milestone: on June 28, 2026, its 15,000th robot rolled off the production line. The unit is a G2 model — a wheeled mobile manipulator with a humanoid torso, designed for industrial deployment. More than a number, this is a signal that the humanoid market is moving beyond the demonstration phase.
Key takeaways
- AGIBOT produced its 15,000th robot — scaling from 10,000 to 15,000 units faster than it scaled from 1,000 to 5,000 a year earlier
- The G2 is a wheeled semi-humanoid with a humanoid torso and grippers, designed for factory floor deployment
- The company claims a 39% share of global humanoid robot shipments in 2025, according to Omdia
- The milestone followed 100 hours of live-streamed factory operations at Longcheer Technology, with G2 robots performing tablet quality inspection
- The 'Three Intelligences in One' architecture unifies locomotion, interaction, and manipulation in a single model
From milestone to production metric
AGIBOT's production growth speaks for itself. Scaling from 1,000 to 5,000 units took roughly a year. From 5,000 to 10,000 — three months. From 10,000 to 15,000 — faster still. The company has not released exact dates for this last phase, but the trajectory is accelerating.
For an industry that two years ago measured success in single-robot laboratory demos, that volume is significant. By comparison, Figure AI deployed a handful of Figure 03 units to BMW Spartanburg. AGIBOT counts thousands of simultaneous deployments.
The 15,000th unit is an AGIBOT G2, a wheeled mobile platform with a humanoid torso and arms. The design deliberately departs from full bipedalism — a wheeled base provides stability and throughput on factory floors, while the upper body handles manipulation tasks. It is a pragmatic choice: not a humanoid for the sake of the idea, but a robot built to work alongside human stations.
Live verification
In the last week of June, AGIBOT completed a six-day live stream from Longcheer Technology's electronics factory in Shanghai. A fleet of G2 robots performed tablet quality inspection for a cumulative 100 hours on an active production line — without breaks, without staging. The task matched factory production rhythms, not a showcase.
This is a meaningful distinction from typical industry demos, where robots operate in controlled environments. Longcheer is a real production line, and the G2 worked alongside human employees.
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.
Dr. Yao Maoqing, Partner and Senior VP, President of the Embodied AI Business Unit, AGIBOT
Architecture and portfolio
AGIBOT says its approach is built on a foundation model it calls 'Three Intelligences in One' — an integrated architecture unifying locomotion, interaction, and manipulation in a single system. The company also ran a World Challenge alongside ICRA 2026, inviting external teams to develop AI models for industrial robotic tasks.
AGIBOT's portfolio extends beyond the G2. The company produces full humanoids, quadrupeds, and specialized systems. Portfolio expansion is paired with growing supply chain capabilities — the company emphasizes that scaling production requires not just hardware, but repeatable manufacturing processes and field deployment capabilities.
Market context
According to analytics firm Omdia, AGIBOT ranked first globally in humanoid robot shipments in 2025 — 5,168 units and a 39% market share. That is one year of data; the 15,000-unit cumulative milestone confirms consistent growth.
Western competitors are logging first deployments, but at significantly smaller scale. Agility Robotics announced a SPAC IPO at a $2.5 billion valuation, and Boston Dynamics is testing Atlas at BMW. NEURA Robotics announced a round of up to $1.4 billion. AGIBOT's production scale places it in a different operational category.
Why this matters
AGIBOT's 15,000th unit is a direct refutation of the 'perpetual demo mode' criticism — that the humanoid market is a product base without scale. AGIBOT counters that with concrete numbers.
At the same time, the pace of growth raises questions about quality at scale. Producing individual demonstration robots and mass-producing robots for industrial deployment are fundamentally different engineering challenges. The company is building those competencies publicly — each iteration, each additional thousand units, is data for the foundation model.
For the broader industry, this is a benchmark. Figure AI, Apptronik, 1X Technologies, NEURA Robotics — all must answer when and how they will reach comparable scale. AGIBOT does not provide the answer, but it sets the target.
What's next
- Longcheer Technology may expand its G2 fleet deployment to additional production lines after the completed pilot — the company has not announced details, but 100 hours of verified operation suggests readiness to continue
- The AGIBOT/ICRA 2026 World Challenge will generate training data and external models — results could feed into the next iteration of the foundation model
- The Agility Robotics SPAC IPO (valued at $2.5 billion) and growing Western competitor funding suggest 2026-2027 are years of consolidation — AGIBOT enters that period with an operational head start of 15,000 deployed robots
Sources
- The Robot Report — AGIBOT produces 15,000th robot, marking a milestone in embodied AI deployment
- Humanoids Daily — Scaled to Scale: AGIBOT Rolls Out 15,000th Robot as Production Ramps Accelerate
- AGIBOT — official blog (agibot.com)





