Most robot makers are chasing the same dream. They want a machine that looks like a person. Genesis AI just went the other way. Its new robot has human-like hands. But it has no legs and no head at all.
Meet Eno
The robot is called Eno. It rolls on wheels instead of walking. Its computer brain sits inside the wheeled base.
Up top, it has a folding tower. It also has a pair of five-fingered hands. Those hands can grip and move objects like a person's. It can fold down into its base when it is not working. Why skip the legs?
Most factories and warehouses have flat floors. So wheels do the job just fine. Legs really only help with stairs. And stairs aren't where these robots will work.
The narrow base is the clever part. It keeps Eno slim. That helps it fit down a packed warehouse aisle.
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The Bet Behind The Design
Genesis AI is backed by Eric Schmidt. He is the former CEO of Google. The startup came out of stealth last year with $105 million in early funding.
Cutting the legs and head means fewer parts. Fewer parts can pinch or break. It also makes the robot cheaper to build.
The hands stayed complex on purpose. The company trains them with real human hand movements. So the hands need a human shape. From the torso up, Eno still looks a lot like a person.
Think of it like a delivery van, not a sports car. It is not flashy. But it is built to work all day.
A New Phase For AI
For years, the AI race lived on screens. Now it is moving into the real world. People call it physical AI. Money has been pouring into startups that chase it.
Genesis builds its own hardware, software, and brains. It even makes the AI model that controls the robot. That full-stack approach is the bet. It has built dozens of units so far, and plans to scale up later in 2026. Genesis came out of stealth about a year ago, in mid-2025.
Most rivals are still racing to build human-shaped robots. Genesis says its all-in-one setup gives a smoother result.
What To Watch
The robot race has poured billions into machines shaped like us. Eno is a bet that the job matters more than the look. That bet is about to be tested on the floor.
Genesis plans to ship it to a few customers later this year. The first ones are factories, warehouses, and labs. Homes and other businesses could come later.
The first robots in your local warehouse may not look human at all.
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