Los Angeles marked Faraday Future’s launch of an embodied-AI education ecosystem, where it showcased a second-generation full-size humanoid robot and FX Navi, a micro quadruped aimed at family and school use.
Chris Chen said the push targets a coming bottleneck in physical AI: collecting real-world training data for robots that must handle gravity, balance, friction and uncertainty rather than just text and images.
Faraday Future also previewed two more humanoids—Master Mini for youth education and athletic competition, and Nova as a smaller companion robot for children.
A two-way partnership with education institution Triple I will support summer camps that teach hands-on robotics skills while generating physical-world data the company says future embodied AI systems need.
The strategy reflects a broader industry shift from digital AI toward physical AI, even as automation raises workforce concerns in sectors already adopting robots.
Can an education-focused startup outmaneuver China's state-funded push for dominance in the physical AI race?
Is using children to gather robot training data an ethical breakthrough or a clever corporate shortcut?
Faraday Future’s EAI Robotics in 2026: Sales Milestones, AI Integration, and Ecosystem Vision
Overview
Faraday Future is experiencing strong momentum as of July 2026, driven by record-high sales, shipments, and deliveries of its EAI robots. This success follows the return of YT Jia as CEO and the launch of five major company transformations. Strategic product launches in June, including new robotics like the All-New Futurist and Navi, have further boosted market reception. The company’s clear focus on artificial intelligence integration is shaping its brand and product strategy, leading to raised full-year targets and positioning Faraday Future as a leader in innovative, AI-powered robotics solutions.