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Walker X

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Walker X

Walker X

UBTECH Robotics

Not yet assessed

Height
130 cm
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
not assessed
Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage
Unverified

Walker X is UBTECH's bipedal commercial humanoid service robot. Six AI technologies including U-SLAM visual navigation and hand-eye coordination. Designed for service, research and home-environment scenarios.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

height
130 cm
weight
63 kg
degrees of freedom
41 DOF: Legs 6×2, Arms 7×2, Hands 6×2, Neck 3
servo joint torque range
4.5 Nm – 200 Nm
servo joint rotational speed
30 – 90 rpm
maximum walking speed
3 km/h
arm payload (Walker X)
1.5 kg per arm (extended state); arm span 600 mm
battery
Lithium battery 54.6V / 10Ah / 3.6 kg; charging time: 2 hours
claimed capability
autonomous battery swapping: Vendor claims Walker S2 is the world's first humanoid robot capable of autonomous battery swapping

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the UBTECH Robotics deep report

Bad
  • Walker S2 features 4th-generation dexterous 5-finger hands with tactile fingertips, enabling fine manipulation tasks beyond the basic grippers on Walker S.

    Hardware specs (5-finger hands, tactile fingertips) are reported by a commerce/review source [6][8] with internally consistent detail, but no independent teardown, third-party lab test, or customer validation confirms that these hands deliver the claimed fine-manipulation performance in real industrial tasks.

    from UBTECH Robotics deep report →
  • Walker S2 has begun mass production and delivery with orders exceeding 800 million yuan.

    The mass production and 800M yuan order figure come exclusively from a UBTECH PR Newswire press release [13] — a vendor-sourced announcement with no independent customer confirmation, audited order book, or third-party reporting verifying the delivery scale or revenue recognition.

    from UBTECH Robotics deep report →
  • Walker robots are deployed at approximately a dozen Chinese automotive manufacturers, with General Motors also deploying the robots.

    Deployment at ~12 Chinese automakers and GM is reported by a Reddit community source [17] with moderate confidence, corroborated only by UBTECH's own mass-production press release [13]; no independent journalist investigation, customer press release, or GM official statement independently confirms the scope or nature of these deployments.

    from UBTECH Robotics deep report →
  • Yanshee educational robots are deployed in 46,000+ classrooms globally.

    The 46,000+ classroom figure comes from a commerce/distributor source [5] — not an independent audit, school district report, or third-party market study — making it plausible given the product's age and price point but unverified by any neutral party.

    from UBTECH Robotics deep report →
  • UBTECH secured a $1 billion credit line from Infini Capital and is establishing a joint-venture superfactory, R&D center, and regional HQ in the Middle East.

    The $1B credit line and Middle East joint venture are reported by two independent news outlets (The Robot Report [12] and AI Insider [14]), which is stronger than a single vendor source, but the facility construction, operational timeline, and actual capital drawdown remain unverified by financial filings or on-the-ground reporting.

    from UBTECH Robotics deep report →
Ugly
  • UBTECH's Walker robot demonstrations are genuine autonomous performance, not CGI or teleoperation, as defended by UBTECH against Figure AI CEO Brett Adcock's public allegations.

    The dossier explicitly flags this as a competitor-vs-competitor dispute [15][16] with no independent technical assessment on either side; UBTECH's rebuttal is self-serving and Adcock's allegation is a competitive claim, leaving the authenticity of demonstrations unverified by any neutral party.

    from UBTECH Robotics deep report →
  • Walker S2 is designed for 8–12 hours/day operation with quarterly service intervals, and some early retail deployments have logged 4,000+ hours without major issues.

    The 8–12 hr/day design spec and 4,000+ hour reliability figure originate solely from a commerce/distributor source [6][9] with no independent customer testimony, maintenance log, or third-party reliability study to substantiate the operational endurance claim for an early-stage industrial humanoid.

    from UBTECH Robotics deep report →

About the company

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