Welcome, Modular!
Modular is a wheeled humanoid robot built for practical automation in factories, warehouses, and commercial environments. At 172 cm tall and 70 kg, it combines a human scale upper body with a stable rolling base, giving it efficient movement on smooth indoor floors and a payload capacity of 16 kg. The robot coordinates 30 degrees of freedom across its body and uses electric servo and BLDC actuators, with harmonic and planetary reducers in the arms, to support repeatable handling work. Its architecture centers on interchangeable modules, allowing the system to be reconfigured as tasks change rather than locking users into one fixed machine. Connectivity includes Ethernet and WiFi, and its Linux and ROS based software stack supports integration into existing automation workflows. The platform is rated safe with humans and is designed for continuous operation. With a Humanoid Guide score of 3, it sits in a developing stage, pairing a lower navigation tier with an improving manipulation tier aimed at structured indoor work.
For sorting goods, Modular combines steady wheeled mobility, a 16 kg payload, and a configurable body that can be adapted to organized material handling routines. It is well matched to facilities that need items moved between work areas, containers, and stations with consistent positioning and long operating hours. For assembling products, the modular architecture becomes even more valuable. Teams can configure the robot around specific assembly sequences, repetitive part handling, and station to station support while keeping the same core platform in service. Its manipulation rating is still in progress rather than top tier, yet the system is clearly designed for structured industrial tasks where repeatability, uptime, and easy reconfiguration matter. This makes it a practical option for businesses that want one humanoid platform to support multiple production roles as processes evolve.
Modular is in early production with limited release, positioning it as a working platform for organizations ready to deploy, learn, and expand alongside the manufacturer. Developed by O ID in Japan, it is aimed at commercial automation, industrial manufacturing, and logistics, with shipping listed from Tokyo. That context matters because the robot emphasizes uptime, modular growth, and practical value over spectacle. A stated 24 7 operating focus and a family of more than nine modules point to a product strategy centered on long term use inside customer sites. In the broader humanoid market, Modular represents a distinctive direction, combining human scale manipulation with a wheeled base for real facilities where flat floors, continuous shifts, and adaptable workflows matter more than legged locomotion. It stands out as a purposeful industrial machine rather than a technology demonstration.
