Faraday Future Launches FF EAI-Robotics With Three Robot Models
- Faraday Future launched its FF EAI-Robotics brand and introduced three robots spanning humanoid and quadruped formats.
- The company opened sales and paid pre-orders while preparing for initial deliveries later this month.
Faraday Future announced the launch of its first robotics portfolio, along with debuting FF EAI-Robotics Inc., a new California-based subsidiary. The company positioned the move as a brand expansion into Embodied AI (EAI) humanoid and bionic robots, introducing two humanoid robots and one quadruped robot as its initial products under the new FF EAI Robotics name.
FF Futurist is described as a full-size professional humanoid robot built for real-world work alongside people, featuring high computing capacity powered by the NVIDIA Orin platform, advanced perception sensors, natural language interaction in up to 50 languages, and a hot-swappable battery design. FF Master is positioned as an athletic humanoid robot with 30 degrees of freedom and is presented for interactive roles across home, education, and event environments. FX Aegis is a quadruped robot described for security and companionship, with support for autonomous patrol, follow-me functions, and expandable hardware and software configurations.
Faraday Future stated that sales and paid, non-binding pre-orders for all three robots opened immediately, with first deliveries planned for the end of February. Pricing starts at $34,990 for FF Futurist, $19,990 for FF Master, and $2,499 for FX Aegis, with optional ecosystem skills packages priced separately. The company said more than 1,200 units are already covered by B2B deposits and that additional robotics products, including a mobile manipulator series, are planned to launch later in February.
🌀 Tom’s Take:
Faraday Future is the latest automaker to move beyond vehicles and treat robotics as a parallel product category. The shift reflects a broader industry pattern where automotive AI, hardware, and supply chains are being repurposed into embodied systems that operate off the road.
Source: Faraday Future