Realbotix's $125,000 Aria Falls Short on Emotion, but Lands Jokes in Las Vegas Test
Updated
Updated · Business Insider · Jul 3
Realbotix's $125,000 Aria Falls Short on Emotion, but Lands Jokes in Las Vegas Test
2 articles · Updated · Business Insider · Jul 3
Summary
$125,000 humanoid robot Aria felt more like an embodied chatbot than a natural conversational partner in a hands-on test at Realbotix's Las Vegas headquarters, with multi-second response delays undercutting its lifelike appearance.
43 motors in the face and neck help drive expressions, facial tracking and movement, but Aria's voice came from an iPad and she failed a basic emotional-reading test, calling a sad expression neutral.
Aria still surprised the tester with humor, practical advice, freestyle rap and on-command language switching, showing stronger entertainment and engagement value than emotional intelligence.
Realbotix said the demo used a previous-generation robot because newer units had already been sold, adding that it is still refining the product as an early-stage company.
Entry-level robotic busts cost about $20,000, and the review concluded full-body models may appeal for events and customer-facing settings even if they do not yet justify their price as conversational interfaces.