Geek+ launches Gino 1, a humanoid robot designed for warehouse operations
The world's largest AMR warehouse company, with 66,000 robots already deployed and a decade of operational logistics data, introduced Gino 1 in February 2026; the robot's Geek+ Brain model was trained on real-world fleet data rather than simulation or research collections.

Geek+, a Beijing-based warehouse robotics company listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, introduced Gino 1 in February 2026, describing it as the world's first general-purpose humanoid robot built specifically for warehouse operations. Gino 1 is designed to handle picking, packing, box handling, and inspection tasks that automated systems have traditionally been unable to address.
The company
Geek+ has deployed more than 66,000 robots across over 40 countries and serves more than 950 customers, including more than 80 Forbes Global 500 companies. Its customer repurchase rate exceeds 80%. In 2025, Geek+ became the world's first publicly listed autonomous mobile robot warehouse company and won the IFOY Award for Integrated Customer Solution. The company has operated large-scale warehouse AMR fleets since 2015, generating more than a decade of real-world logistics operational data from live deployments across every major warehouse type.
That history is directly relevant to Gino 1. Geek+ Brain, the embodied intelligence platform powering Gino 1, was trained on years of real-world warehouse data accumulated from Geek+'s deployed fleet and supplemented by large-scale simulation. No humanoid startup entering the logistics market in 2025 or 2026 has built its model on comparable volumes of real operational warehouse data. The training foundation is a function of Geek+'s decade of AMR deployments, not a research programme.
The product
Gino 1 stands 168 centimetres tall and weighs 63 kilograms. It is equipped with dual robotic arms with seven degrees of freedom each and dexterous hands for object manipulation. The robot handles items up to 15 kilograms, navigates at 1.5 metres per second, and operates for more than eight hours per charge. It handles both regular and irregular-shaped items across sorting, loading, and inventory management workflows.
Gino 1 is not entering a greenfield market. Geek+ is the world's largest AMR warehouse company by deployment volume, and Gino 1 is designed to integrate into existing Geek+ fleets managed through unified fleet orchestration software. Where other humanoid companies are building standalone pilots at individual customer sites, Geek+ is adding a humanoid layer to a logistics ecosystem it already operates at scale.
The LogiMAT debut
Geek+ showed a video demonstration of Gino 1 at LogiMAT 2026 in Stuttgart, Germany, between March 24 and 26, alongside the EMEA debut of its Geek+ Brain-powered Robot Arm Picking Station. The LogiMAT demonstration was a video, not a live robot on the show floor. The Robot Arm Picking Station was shown in live demonstration; Gino 1 was presented as a roadmap product.
Maturity
Gino 1 has been announced and demonstrated on video. No commercial deployment timeline, customer names, pricing, or production volumes have been disclosed. The "world's first humanoid robot built for warehousing" framing is Geek+'s own claim. The Geek+ Brain training data advantage and the existing fleet integration path are the most substantive differentiators from competing humanoid warehouse entries; how those translate into commercial deployment timelines remains undisclosed.
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