A classification system for robots based on their mechanical structure, application domain, or level of autonomy, ranging from fixed industrial arms to fully autonomous humanoids.
Just like vehicles come in cars, trucks, and buses, robots come in many types. Each is designed for a specific job, whether it's welding in a factory, performing surgery, or walking like a human.
Why It Matters
Understanding robot types helps you navigate the industry. When a company says they build 'cobots,' that means something very different from 'AGVs' or 'humanoids.' Each type has different technical challenges, market sizes, and investment landscapes.
Real-World Examples
- Industrial robots: Fixed arms performing repetitive tasks (FANUC, KUKA, Estun)
- Collaborative robots (cobots): Designed to work alongside humans (Universal Robots, JAKA)
- Mobile robots: Navigate autonomously through spaces (Geek+, Hikrobot)
- Humanoid robots: Human-shaped robots for versatile tasks (UBTECH, Fourier Intelligence)
China's robotics ecosystem covers every robot type. Shenzhen leads in humanoids and drones, the Yangtze River Delta (Shanghai, Suzhou, Hangzhou) dominates in cobots and industrial arms, and Beijing focuses on AI-powered service robots. The country's 14th Five-Year Plan specifically targets leadership in humanoid robots, surgical robots, and autonomous mobile robots.