XGSynBot demonstrated an AI-powered dual-arm mobile robot during a private showcase held alongside CES in Las Vegas. Although the company appears to be avoiding the word “humanoid”, it does look like a humanoid.
The wheeled, dual-arm robot was developed by China-based XGSynBot (Suzhou) Intelligence Technology, which described it as “an AI-powered dual arm robot designed for industrial and commercial use”.
The company added that XGSynBot was designed for “cross-scenario use across industries including warehousing and logistics, 3C electronics, automotive manufacturing, clinical experiments, scientific research and education”.
It also highlighted the platform’s combination of “force-controlled dual manipulators, an omni-directional base, and a multi-sensor vision system”, alongside what it described as a “universal model that enables perception, manipulation, and mobility”.
Product material shared with attendees describes XGSynBot as part of a broader effort to move robots beyond narrowly defined tasks. The company states that “by developing embodied AI robots, we are actively advancing robots from single-task to cross-scenario applications”.
One configuration presented during the showcase was the Z1 wheeled dual-arm robot, which the company says integrates two lightweight, force-controlled manipulators with an omni-directional chassis and a multi-sensor vision system.
According to the product documentation, the robot is intended to support multiple tools and end-effectors, with examples including welding, screw locking, spray painting, suction and clamping, and dexterous-hand manipulation
The brochure also lists a range of potential deployment environments – from warehouses and manufacturing lines to laboratories and retail – under the tagline “One for All”, while noting that performance specifications are indicative only and subject to contract terms and regional supply conditions
CES 2026 featured a growing number of mobile manipulation platforms aimed at industrial and commercial settings, reflecting broader interest in combining mobility, perception and manipulation in a single system.
The XGSynBot demonstrations were conducted behind closed doors rather than on the main show floor, with meetings arranged directly between company representatives and attending journalists.
No pricing, deployment timelines or customer references were disclosed during the media showcase.
