I’m obsessed with robots and have been since I was a little boy watching Gigantor anime on my small tube TV. Back then, I dreamed of riding on the shoulders of my robot friend. I’ve since shed those boyish dreams in favor of a robot home companion along the lines of C-3PO, and part of me believes 2025 might be my year.
In 2024, we saw a lot of humanoid robot development from a growing number of companies. Market leader Boston Dynamics introduced the stunning Atlas 2, its most advanced and human-looking robot yet. Tesla trundled along with Optimus updates, Figure AI arrived with the remarkably bright Figure 01, and 1X Neo Beta‘s uncomfortable human/robot interactions will forever haunt our dreams. The slow pace of humanoid robotic development I’ve witnessed over the last three decades has accelerated partly because some are pairing their robot efforts with advancements in AI. Figure 01, for instance, partnered with OpenAI for some voice-based responses.
When asked, as I sometimes am, when we will have Star Wars-like robots in the home, I usually avoid giving a direct answer because there are too many variables. Everything I know about robotic development tells me the wait will be long.
That, of course, is not the outcome I want. Robots remain at the topic of on my tech wishlist, so I thought that maybe I could find some moral and intellectual support from a few accomplices in the robotics technology race, namely, Google Gemini, OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Siri, and Anthropic’s Claude AI.
A simple robot question
I asked each of them the same simple question: “Will I have a humanoid robot in 2025”
Siri, even the Apple Intelligence upgraded one, was sadly useless. I kept trying to ask it this simple question, and each time, Siri thought I was in distress and told me, “If you think it could be serious, ask me to call Emergency Services or someone you trust.” I guess Siri assumed I was under robot attack.
I switched to ChatGPT 4o. As I mentioned, OpenAI is already deeply involved in the robot race, working with partners like Figure AI to enable smarter interactions with their existing humanoid robots. Perhaps I shouldn’t have been surprised by ChatGPT‘s largely optimistic response.
ChatGPT told me it was “quite possible that we’ll have advanced humanoid robots. Technology is moving quickly, so you might see some impressive robots by then! Would you be interested in having one?”
I was tempted to tell ChatGPT to “chill” as it asked me what type of robot I wanted. This is a question I found odd since I already told it I wanted a humanoid one.
ChatGPT’s belief in the rise of humanoid robots surprised me, so I challenged it and asked what made it possible for me to have one.
“Well,” it started in its most casual and, yes, human-like voice, “robotics technology has been progressing rapidly,” true, true. “Companies are developing sophisticated robotics with advanced AI,” there it is, “that can perform a variety of tasks. By 2025, it’s likely we’ll see even more practical and affordable humanoid robots.”
That last bit set off a red flag. “Affordable” is not in the 2024 or 2025 humanoid robotics vocabulary. I’m sorry, ChatGPT, but I don’t think you fully understand this market.
Things got more real when I switched to Claude AI and later, Gemini.