Published on

Factory Floor vs. Corporate Lab: AGIBOT to Livestream Humanoid Fleet from Active Mass-Production Line

Humanoids Daily
Written byHumanoids Daily
  • AGIBOT will host a six-day global livestream from June 23 to June 28, 2026, broadcasting directly from Longcheer Technology’s Nanchang factory.
  • The broadcast will feature multiple humanoid robots managing a full quality-inspection section within a live tablet mass-production workflow alongside human operators.
  • The initiative serves as a direct strategic counter to Figure AI’s recent 200-hour laboratory sorting marathon, moving the public benchmark from controlled environments to live industrial settings.
  • The stream builds upon AGIBOT’s initial April 2026 deployment at Longcheer, where the company reported its G2 units achieved a 99% operational success rate.
  • Audiences will be able to evaluate multi-robot coordination, human-robot collaboration, and long-duration stability under real-world factory rhythms.

NANCHANG, China — The public-facing validation wars between the world’s leading embodied AI developers are entering an unedited, real-time phase. Rather than relying on polished, cut-together promotional videos, robotics firms are increasingly turning to extended live broadcasts to prove mechanical reliability and autonomous capabilities.

Chinese embodied AI developer AGIBOT has announced a six-day global livestream running from June 23 to June 28, 2026. Broadcaster units will stream directly from Longcheer Technology’s active Nanchang factory, providing a raw look at multiple humanoid robots operating inside a live consumer electronics mass-production pipeline.

A brightly lit factory floor showing a long row of black and white AGIBOT humanoid robots working alongside human operators in white lab coats at assembly stations along a conveyor belt.
A teaser image from AGIBOT's upcoming livestream reveals multiple humanoid robots deployed along a tablet mass-production line at Longcheer Technology, working directly alongside human operators in a live manufacturing environment.

Shifting the Battlefield to the Factory Floor

The timing and setting of AGIBOT's broadcast represent an explicit challenge to Western competitors—most notably Silicon Valley-based Figure AI. In mid-May, Figure completed a highly publicized 200-hour continuous autonomous livestream at its Sunnyvale headquarters, processing nearly 250,000 packages using its Figure 03 fleet.

While Figure’s marathon was a massive engineering milestone for hardware durability, it drew criticism from skeptics who noted that sorting boxes within a highly optimized corporate laboratory loop represents a narrow, isolated application. Industry peers like Agility Robotics were quick to point out the difference between lab-based demonstrations and revenue-generating hardware deployed inside actual customer logistics hubs.

AGIBOT is attempting to bypass this "lab-only" critique entirely. By positioning its broadcast inside Longcheer's tablet mass-production facility, the company aims to demonstrate that its bipedal and wheeled humanoids can handle the unpredictable edge cases, physical constraints, and strict operational rhythms of a third-party commercial factory floor.

Figure AI LivestreamAGIBOT Livestream
• Sunnyvale HQ Laboratory• Active Industrial Plant
• Single-Workstation Loop• Full Quality Inspection
• Package Sorting Task• Electronics Mass-Production
• Isolated Fleet Rotation• Human-Robot Co-working
A teaser for the livestream

Live Testing Under Real Industrial Rhythms

According to AGIBOT, the six-day broadcast will focus on a full quality-inspection section of the tablet assembly line. Viewers will watch multiple robots perform long-duration operations, coordinate physical pathways with one another, and collaborate directly with human manufacturing workers.

The factory floor is notoriously unforgiving compared to research environments. Industrial deployment requires machines to maintain extreme consistency and repeatability without disrupting the overarching production velocity.

The upcoming livestream will serve as the first extended public audit of the joint automation project first announced during AGIBOT AI Week in April 2026. At the time of the initial integration, AGIBOT’s G2 robots were tasked with loading and unloading Multimedia Integrated Testing (MMIT) stations. The companies previously claimed a throughput of 310 units per hour (UPH) and an operational success rate exceeding 99% over a 140-hour trial period. This broadcast will reveal whether those metrics hold up under continuous, multi-day public scrutiny.

As embodied AI moves beyond laboratory demonstrations and single-workstation showcases, real production lines are becoming an important testbed," AGIBOT noted in its press announcement. "Unlike staged demonstrations, factory environments require robots to work within actual production rhythms.

The Realities of "Deployment Year One"

The commercial stakes for AGIBOT are high. The company has aggressively labeled 2026 as its “Deployment Year One,” moving its corporate messaging away from technical novelties toward tangible industrial return on investment (ROI). Having confirmed that its 10,000th robot rolled off the assembly line in March 2026, the firm is under intense pressure to prove that its high-volume manufacturing capabilities match functional maturity on the ground.

The system architecture driving these units relies on AGIBOT’s "One Robotic Body, Three Intelligences" framework, which unifies locomotion, manipulation, and multimodal interaction. While digital twins and simulators like Genie Sim 3.0 have been utilized to prepare the fleet for deployment, the physical factory layout introduces lighting shifts, tactile variances, and human behavioral anomalies that cannot be fully anticipated in simulation.

Just as Figure’s livestream exposed minor behavioral quirks and autonomous system resets, AGIBOT's unedited broadcast will likely showcase the raw, unvarnished limits of current-generation "Physical AI." For an industry frequently accused of over-hyping pre-recorded capabilities, AGIBOT's willingness to broadcast from an active manufacturing line is a welcome step toward real-world accountability.

The global livestream will be accessible via AGIBOT’s official X and YouTube channels starting June 23.

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Share this article

Stay Ahead in Humanoid Robotics

Get the latest developments, breakthroughs, and insights in humanoid robotics — delivered straight to your inbox.