LG to test CLOiD home robot in real-world settings next year

Following its unveiling at CES 2026, LG Electronics will conduct real-world testing of its AI home robot CLOiD next year, prioritizing safety and reliability, CEO Lyu Jae-cheol announced. Rapid robotic advances could accelerate commercialization.

LAS VEGAS — At a CES 2026 press conference, LG CEO Lyu Jae-cheol outlined next steps for the CLOiD robot, unveiled earlier in the week to handle household chores and integrate with smart appliances.

Lyu, in his first press briefing since taking office in November 2025, said, “Rather than discussing a concrete commercialization timeline at this stage, we plan to move the robot out of the laboratory and into real-world settings around next year.” A feasibility demonstration is scheduled for that period, with launch dates to follow based on results.

Impressed by fast-evolving robot tech at CES—including competitors from Chinese firms—Lyu noted commercialization could happen sooner than expected, potentially speeding up CLOiD's timeline.

Acknowledging CLOiD's current slower speed compared to some rivals, Lyu emphasized, “Safety and reliability take priority since the robot must operate in real homes. Speed will improve primarily through large-scale training, which is still ongoing.” He added, “We expect CLOiD to reach near-human levels of performance within a few months. Once this is achieved, speed will no longer be an issue.”

Связанные статьи

Building on 2025's dominance with over 90% global market share, Chinese humanoid robots drew major attention at CES and China's Lunar New Year Gala in early 2026. Tesla's Optimus remains in limited production amid delays, with mass deployment eyed for 2027 or later. Analyst Lian Jye Su highlights China's manufacturing scale while noting U.S. software strengths in the intensifying competition.

Сообщено ИИ

Two months after Hyundai's CES 2026 unveiling of the Atlas humanoid robot, the company's shares jumped 80 percent amid intensifying competition with Tesla's Optimus in the humanoid robotics market, projected to hit $5 trillion by 2050. While Atlas targets heavy industry from 2028, Tesla aims for affordable home use.

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