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The lovable, the creepy and the utterly confusing

January 10, 2026
in Technology
Reading Time: 22 mins read
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The lovable, the creepy and the utterly confusing
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CES always has its share of attention-grabbing robots. But this year in particular seemed to be a landmark year for robotics. The advancement in AI technology has not only given robots better “brains,” it’s enabled new levels of autonomy and given rise to an ambitious, if sometimes questionable, vision for our robot-filled future.

From sassy humanoids to AI-powered pets and chore-handling assistants, we sought out as many cute, strange and capable robots as we could find in Las Vegas. These are the ones that made the biggest impression.

Agibot Humanoids

The lovable, the creepy and the utterly confusing

Agibot’s X2 humanoid robot. (Karissa Bell for Engadget)

Of all the humanoids we saw at CES, Agibot’s made the biggest impression. The company was showing off two models: the larger A2 and the smaller X2 (pictured above). The latter impressed us with its dance moves — the company told us it can learn surprisingly complex choreography — but the A2 turned out to be surprisingly capable at chatting up CES goers.

Later in the show, we came across the A2 at IntBot’s booth, where the company had custom versions of both Agibot humanoids “running” their booth. I spent several minutes talking with “Nylo” and was genuinely impressed by its conversational skills, even if its roasts could use a little work. — Karissa Bell, Senior Reporter

Dreame’s robo vac arms and legs

Dreame was back this year with some wild robot vacuums. The company showed of the Cyber 10 Ultra, a robot vacuum with a multipurpose extendable arm. The arm, which we got a glimpse of at last year’s show, can pick up stuff, but it also has its own cleaning attachments, allowing the robot to clean hard-to-reach corners and other spots that wouldn’t otherwise be accessible.

Dreame also brought its latest wild concept, the Cyber X, which has legs that propel it up and down full-size staircases. The legs are somewhat unsettling — they look alarmingly similar to mini chainsaws — but watching it glide up and down stairs was impressive all the same. — KB

OlloBot

An OlloBot robot with a long purple neck stands in front of a display showing a home calendar covered in stickers

The long neck version of OlloBot. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

OlloBot is one of those semi-ridiculous CES robots that’s just impossible not to smile at. It has the goofiest face, with top-sitting frog eyes slapped onto a tablet where its mouth is displayed. Then, on top of that, it has a patch of soft fur on its neck and nowhere else on its body, which is penguin shaped and complete with flappy little arms. There are two versions of OlloBot, one that’s short with a fixed neck and another where the neck can stretch out to make it much taller. And of course, it can be dressed up in silly outfits.

It’s a family-focused robot that responds to voice commands and touch, and is meant to capture memories as they happen, snapping pics and videos for its diary of notable moments. It can be used to make calls and control smart home devices. Everything is stored locally in its removable heart module, and there’s a companion app for additional interactions. — Cheyenne MacDonald, Weekend Editor

Rovie

A robot with a dust pan like appendage dumps toys into a bin

A robot with a dust pan like appendage dumps toys into a bin. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

Sure, we’ve seen multiple robots (particularly robovacuums) that can pick objects up off the floor and put them away to make homes tidier, but this one is cute and has a little face. Instead of using an arm to grab one thing at a time, Clutterbot’s Rovie has a dustpan-style tray with two sweepers that fold out from its front. It drives around and, using computer vision, identifies toys that have been left on the floor and scoops them up. Then, it dumps them in a designated bin where they’re consolidated and out of the way.

It’s still in the R&D phase, a team member said when I visited the booth, but this is one I’m hoping to see become a real, purchasable product soon. For parents of small children who are constantly leaving their toys around, it would be pretty convenient to have a tiny robot picking up after them. Also for me, who doesn’t have children but a very sweet and hardworking cat who loves to steal socks and then deliver them as if they’re her kills, leaving socks scattered all over the house. Clutterbot team, if you’re reading this, please add socks to the list of items Rovie can sweep up. — CM

Saros Rover

Not to be outdone, Roborock also brought a stairclimbing robot vacuum to CES, Saros Rover. And, unlike Dreame’s prototype, the Roborock can also clean the stairs while it climbs. No word on when it will be available or how much it might cost (probably a lot!) but the company says it is “a real product in development.” -KB

CLOiD

CLOiD folded laundry at LG's CES booth.

CLOiD folded laundry at LG’s CES booth. (Karissa Bell for Engadget)

LG’s CLOiD was definitely the most ambitious robot we saw at CES 2026. The company showed its home helper concept (slowly) folding and sorting laundry, fetching drinks from the fridge, putting food in the oven and retrieving a set of lost keys. But while the 15-minute demo gave us a tantalizing look at the appliance maker’s vision for a “zero labor home,” it’s unlikely to be anything more than a slick demo anytime soon. The company has made no commitment to actually make a version of CLOiD people can actually buy. — KB

Allex

WIRobotics' Allex robot makes a heart sign with its hands

WIRobotics’ Allex robot makes a heart sign with its hands. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

WIRobotics brought its new humanoid, Allex, to CES, and the robot was really hamming it up when we stopped by the booth, striking poses and engaging with visitors. It’s a waist-up robot with articulated parts, from its arms to its fingers, and is meant to be a general purpose tool that could be used in manufacturing, the service industry or even households. Each hand can hold objects of up to about 6.6 lbs, and the robotic hand has 15 degrees of freedom. The company’s website shows the robot’s fingers are dexterous enough to do the Gen-Z heart sign, but when it looked at Karissa and me it threw a millennial heart up. Did Allex lowkey call us unc? — CM

Poketomo

Poketomo in one of the many outfits Sharp brought to CES.

Poketomo in one of the many outfits Sharp brought to CES. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

Sharp’s Poketomo is an improbably adorable tiny meerkat. Well, technically it’s an AI companion shaped like a fuzzy, portable meerkat. It might look like a toy, but the company says it’s actually to be a companion for adults.

It’s small enough you can carry it around with you throughout the day (Sharp even makes a tiny Poketomo-sized clear backpack). Like a lot of AI companion devices we saw at CES, it’s equipped with a small camera and microphone that enables it to constantly interact with you. The camera also enables its “memory” so the pet can recognize and deliver personalized updates to its person. Poketomo launched recently in Japan, but sadly Sharp says it has no current plans to sell it in other markets. — KB

Bibo

A Labubu-like AI toy with brown fur and big eyes and wearing a gray sweater

Moony bibo (I-Type). (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

It seemed like everyone was trying to cash in on Labubu hype at CES 2026. There were Pop Mart-style bag charms all over the place and countless products that looked suspiciously like the now ubiquitous toy monster. We even got one pitch for a “a labubu-like robot that talks to you” that, in fact, did not look like a Labubu in any way, shape or form. But there was one truly Labubu-like tiny robot that managed to stand out from the rest and kind of stole my heart, even though I’m not particularly into Labubus. (Please don’t make me say Labubu ever again.)

Bibo is a cute-as-hell AI toy that’s meant to be a companion you bring with you everywhere. It has a little camera on its head that it uses to see the world around it, and can recognize its owner’s face and tone of voice, so it can respond to interactions in an emotionally appropriate way. It’ll keep a daily diary of its activities, and while the toy comes in two starting personality “types” — Sunny bibo (E-Type), the bubbly extrovert, and Moony bibo (I-Type), the gentle, sensitive one — they’ll develop more unique personalities over time. Their fur is soft and warm, so it feels like you’re petting a kitten.

Bibo robot without the fur

Why is it even cuter like this? (Cheyenne MacDonald)

At the booth, the team had several of them on display wearing various outfits, in little dioramas showing them in classroom and camping scenes, and even deconstructed with the fur removed, which somehow made it look even cuter. Bibo isn’t available to purchase yet, and when it is, it’ll launch first in China before potentially expanding depending on its success at home. — CM

Sharpa

Sharpa's humanoid robot is seen playing ping-pong

Sharpa’s humanoid robot is seen playing ping-pong. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

Sharpa’s booth had a lot going on and was definitely one of the bigger crowd-pullers. There was a humanoid robot playing ping-pong, another taking selfies with people and another dealing  blackjack, along with a disembodied robotic hand that could mirror visitors’ finger movements. The autonomous demos showed off what that highly dexterous hand can do, and it was pretty impressive — especially seeing it draw individual cards from the deck. — CM

Zeroth

Zeroth's robot that resembles Wall-E is pictured standing on a circular platform, with its arms held out to its side and looking slightly up

Zeroth’s W1 robot. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

Chinese robotics startup Zeroth brought two adorable home robots to CES: a pint-sized humanoid companion bot and a rolling robot that looks like Wall-E, with tank-style tracked treads so it can ride around outside. We didn’t see these guys doing too much, but they sure were cute. The one that resembles Wall-E, called W1, kind of melted my heart just looking at it. (Don’t get attached, you can’t afford it.)

The tiny humanoid, M1, costs $2,400 while W1 costs $5,000. Both are expected to ship this spring, with a tentative date of April 15. — CM

Sweekar

Two Sweekar devices are pictured on a table, one wearing a pink and blue snowboarder outfit and the other (behind it) wearing a cowboy hat and outfit

Sweekars in their little outfits. (Karissa Bell for Engadget)

Takway’s Sweekar pocket pet was something I looked at and immediately thought, sigh, I’m going to buy that. It’s a Tamagotchi-like virtual pet with AI smarts so it can form a personality based on your interactions with it and the activities you do together. The idea is that it “grows” with you. Like a Tamagotchi, it will require more frequent care in the younger stages of its life cycle. But after it reaches the adult level, it autonomously cares for itself, and it never dies. It can eventually keep itself entertained, and go off on its own virtual adventures and bring you back tales of its travels.

Sweekar is super cute as is, and it can be dressed up in little outfits for more personalization. The device comes in light yellow, pink, and blue, and we saw it sporting a snowboarder outfit and a full cowboy getup. — CM

Realbotix

One of Realbotix robots pictured from the chest up. She is a dark gray color, and has white pigtails

One of Realbotix’ robots. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

Realbotix is a company we’ve seen a lot at CES over the years, and it was at the show again for 2026 with several of its highly customizable, realistic humanoid robots. As always, it was among the most unnerving exhibits we saw. New for this year, Realbotix was demonstrating its Robotic Vision System, which allows its robots to see and react to their surroundings more naturally, tracking faces to look directly at whoever is talking and better reading emotion from facial expressions. Damn, it can sense my fear now… — CM

Onero H1

Onero H1 had an endearingly blank stare.

Onero H1 had an endearingly blank stare. (Karissa Bell for Engadget)

Switchbot surprised us with its own chore-handling robot, Onero H1, which also won Engadget editors’ pick for best robot of CES 2026. We were immediately taken by its weirdly long body and endearingly blank stare as it slowly wheeled around picking up laundry and depositing the items in a washing machine.

Like a lot of robot demos we saw at CES, we only saw Onero performing a small part of what Switchbot says it’s actually capable of. But Onero also seemed much more realistic in terms of the type of robot helpers that people might actually see outside of CES, and the company told us it does plan to sell Onero (albeit in limited quantities) by the end of the year.  — KB

Cocomo

An orange, egg-shaped robot with a black face hearts in its eyes sitting on a wheeled base.

Ludens AI Cocomo robot. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

Another robot pet that won us over immediately was Cocomo. Created by Japanese startup Ludens AI, Cocomo is an autonomous robot friend that yes, uses AI to respond to voice and touch and is meant to bond with its owners over time. The egg-shaped creature can scoot around on a wheeled base, or you can carry it around with you.

But what we loved about Cocomo is that it’s not trying to be yet another AI assistant, give out life advice or perform tasks. Its goal is to provide companionship and well, be your friend. And while it can respond to voice input it doesn’t exactly have a voice of its own: it communicates via cute humming sounds, which is a lot less creepy than some of the talking robots we saw. — KB

Yonbo

Yonbo AI companion, a children's dog-like robot, pictured at CES Unveiled

Yonbo at CES. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

Yonbo is a kids’ AI companion robot that totally charmed us. It kind of looks like a dog, and when we visited its booth at Unveiled, there were four of them playfully bopping their heads to a pop song and cycling through different cute facial expressions and emoji eyes (including bowls of ramen). It’s designed to be an intelligent playmate that can tag along for activities, talk with a child and read them stories, and even help them work through emotions, like getting frustrated during a game.

Yonbo’s movement is controlled by a wristband, so it doesn’t require a phone to play with. It can also be used as an extra pair of eyes for parents around the house. In Parental Monitor mode, which the team says is the only time its camera will be able to stream and store video, parents are able to see what Yonbo sees. The robot costs $800 and is available now.  — CM

MÖFO

will.i.am's latest tech product, MOFO pictured at CES. Mofo is a teddy bear style AI agent, shown here in black and pink

MÖFO in a glass case at CES. (Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget)

If we’re being completely honest, the pitch for will.i.am‘s MÖFO (yes, MOFO, like motherfucker) had us a bit, um, perplexed for a hot second. We read it and all the accompanying materials over and over trying to figure out what, exactly, this thing does. Some of the claims that added to this confusion: “the agent ‘octopuses’ across your digital ecosystem through its eight USB-C connections”; it “converts moments into objects”; it “turns life notes into a life operating system.”

We get it now, (we think): It’s agentic AI hardware, kind of like a Rabbit R1 or AI Pin but in the form of a teddy bear. Sadly, we didn’t get to see MÖFO up close or watch it do anything, but we are nonetheless intrigued, if still a bit confused, by this strange teddy bear. — CM and KB

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