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Friday 03 July 2026 04:30:25 GMT
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A Chinese company just built a robot that promises to love you and never leave. UBTech unveiled the U1 this week in Shenzhen — a full-size humanoid robot with silicone skin, 88 moving joints, and an AI system that claims to read your emotions with over 90 percent accuracy. It holds conversations, remembers your routines, reminds you to take medication, and adjusts its tone if it senses you're stressed or upset. The price tag: anywhere from 119,800 yuan (around $17,600) to a jaw-dropping 990,000 yuan (about $145,700) for the premium
A Chinese company just built a robot that promises to love you and never leave. UBTech unveiled the U1 this week in Shenzhen — a full-size humanoid robot with silicone skin, 88 moving joints, and an AI system that claims to read your emotions with over 90 percent accuracy. It holds conversations, remembers your routines, reminds you to take medication, and adjusts its tone if it senses you're stressed or upset. The price tag: anywhere from 119,800 yuan (around $17,600) to a jaw-dropping 990,000 yuan (about $145,700) for the premium "Ultra" version. More than 13,300 people have already pre-ordered one, with deliveries starting in September. The pitch is blunt. UWorld's brand chief told the crowd: "Our bionic robots can accompany you for a lifetime. It will never betray you, will always be loyal to you, and will love you unconditionally." UBTech is targeting two groups specifically — single people and older adults living alone. China has over 90 million adults living solo and 118 million "empty-nest" seniors, and the company is betting that a machine that never gets tired, never argues, and never leaves is exactly what a lonely market wants. Buyers can even customize the robot's face to resemble a loved one, a celebrity, or a fictional character. It's not all sci-fi glamour though. The base model can only move its head, eyes, and mouth. Battery life tops out at four hours. It can't cook, clean, or do chores. And critics point to the "uncanny valley" problem — robots that look almost human but not quite tend to unsettle people rather than comfort them. Still, the bigger question isn't whether the tech works. It's what happens when loneliness becomes a product category, and companionship comes with a price tag and a delivery date. Would you ever consider one of these for a family member living alone #russia #china

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