Noetix Robotics

Noetix N2

Deployment Readiness Score 50 / 100
Price $9,000 third-party estimate; not vendor-confirmed
Image of Noetix N2 by Noetix Robotics.

Analyst summary

At a glance

The Noetix N2 is a compact bipedal humanoid robot from Noetix Robotics, positioned primarily for education, university research, and entertainment demonstration. At 1. 18 m and 30 kg, the N2 targets accessible, lower-cost humanoid robots in a market dominated by larger, more expensive platforms.

Evidence signal

Deployments

0 linked deployments

No published deployments are linked to this robot yet.

Profile basics

Specifications

Robot type
Full-size bipedal humanoid
Height
1.18 m
Weight
30 kg
Payload
5 kg
Speed
2.0 m/s
Runtime
2 h
Locomotion
Bipedal
Manipulation
Two arms, end effectors not disclosed
Degrees of freedom
18 DoF
Autonomy / control
Semi-autonomous / assisted autonomy

Profile context

Description

The Noetix N2 is a small-scale humanoid robot built by Noetix Robotics, a Beijing-based company bringing a notably compact and agile platform to the humanoid robots landscape. Standing just under 1.2 meters and weighing 30 kilograms, the N2 packs 18 degrees of freedom into a design that emphasizes dynamic motion — walking, running, jumping, and even backflips — powered by deep reinforcement learning and edge AI computing rated at 67 TOPS. The platform runs on a 48-volt quick-swap battery with a rated runtime of two hours, and supports development through Python, C++, and ROS APIs. The vendor frames the N2 around education, campus programs, entertainment, and child interaction, but does not present it as an industrial platform. Public information comes primarily from the vendor website and third-party reseller listings. Broader adoption data and independent deployment evidence remain thin.

Named customer deployments for the Noetix N2 are not clearly disclosed in public sources. The robot appears on at least one industrial components marketplace, RBTX, but availability through a reseller is not the same as deployed field use. Vendor communication emphasizes education, research, and entertainment performance rather than factory-floor automation or logistics, which shapes the buyer's deployment assessment differently than for industrial humanoid robots. No pilots, field trials, or commercial rollouts are publicly documented. The public record is stronger on technical positioning — dynamic locomotion, ROS-based development, edge AI — than on operating evidence. Buyers evaluating the Noetix N2 for procurement should verify whether the platform has moved beyond lab demonstration into repeatable, real-world use within their target environment.

The Noetix N2 may be most relevant for university robotics labs, STEM education programs, and interactive demonstration settings where a compact, relatively affordable humanoid robot with strong locomotion capabilities is needed. The 5-kilogram payload and small stature make it unsuitable for industrial material handling or heavy manipulation tasks in their current form. Buyers should evaluate the closed-platform API model, the Python, C++, and ROS compatibility, and the semi-autonomous autonomy posture against their own development capacity. The estimated price range of $7,999 to $9,000 positions the N2 in an accessible bracket for academic buyers, but procurement clarity depends on whether the platform ships reliably, what warranty and support structures exist outside China, and whether software and hardware documentation are sufficient for independent research teams.