Shanghai-based AGIBOT produced its 15,000th robot, a wheeled mobile manipulator called the AGIBOT G2. The company deployed the G2 on Longcheer's tablet production lines to conduct quality inspections.
In late June, AGIBOT completed 100 hours of livestreamed factory operations. The G2 matched factory production rhythms and worked continuously alongside human line workers.
Founded in 2023, AGIBOT develops foundation models and robotic hardware using a "Three Intelligences in One" architecture that integrates locomotion, interaction, and manipulation. The company's portfolio includes humanoids, quadrupeds, and commercial cleaning systems.
Production volume is accelerating. AGIBOT took one year to scale from 1,000 to 5,000 units. The subsequent jump from 5,000 to 10,000 units took three months. According to market research firm Omdia, AGIBOT ranked first globally in humanoid robot shipments in 2025, delivering 5,168 units for a 39% global market share.
Dr. Yao Maoqing, senior vice president at AGIBOT, stated the 15,000-unit milestone reflects an industry-wide transition from product validation to scaled deployment.
Why it matters: Reaching 15,000 units indicates that the primary challenge for embodied AI is shifting from prototype design to supply chain execution and repeatable manufacturing. As developers transition from single-robot demonstrations to commercial trials, sustained production volume will determine which hardware platforms secure long-term industrial contracts.