Neura Robotics used CES 2026 in Las Vegas to present a new generation of robots and demonstrate its Neuraverse software platform, positioning the system as a shared operating layer for connected robotic systems.
The company exhibited an updated version of its humanoid robot, 4NE1, alongside a smaller variant called 4NE1 Mini, and a newly introduced quadruped robot.
All three systems were shown operating within the Neuraverse platform, which Neura describes as a way of enabling robots to share learned skills and operational data across devices and environments.
According to the company, most robots today operate as isolated systems. Neura said the Neuraverse was designed to connect robots to a common platform so that experience gained by one machine could be reused by others.
The company said the platform has been opened to early-access partners and is intended to allow developers to publish and distribute robotic applications and skills.
David Reger, founder and chief executive of Neura Robotics, said: “The world is preparing for robots, but robots also need a world that is prepared for them.
“With the Neuraverse, we’re building the invisible engine that connects, empowers, and scales intelligence across every device and environment.”
The updated 4NE1 humanoid was developed in collaboration with Studio F.A. Porsche and was displayed publicly for the first time at the show. Neura also demonstrated service and household robots performing live tasks in simulated domestic and industrial scenarios.
The quadruped robot, designed for operation in uneven or complex environments, was shown as a platform for industrial inspection and service tasks.
The company said the robot supports autonomous navigation, multi-sensor perception, and payloads of up to 48.5 pounds. The smaller 4NE1 Mini humanoid was presented as a system aimed at research, education, and laboratory environments.
Neura said all robots shown at the booth were powered by Neura Isaac GR00T XX and simulated using Neura Isaac Lab and Isaac Sim.
Spencer Huang of Neura and David Kehr of Schaeffler appeared with Reger during on-stand presentations discussing humanoid robotics and industrial applications.
Neura’s CES exhibit focused on demonstrations of robot connectivity, task learning, and software-defined motion, highlighting how robotic systems could be updated and adapted without hardware changes.
CES 2026 took place in Las Vegas in early January.
