LimX Dynamics raises $200M for humanoid and multi-form robots
LimX Dynamics’ Series B backs a product stack that spans full-size humanoids, wheeled platforms, and TRON 2, a modular robot built for embodied AI research across multiple body forms.

LimX Dynamics raised $200M in Series B funding on February 2, 2026, adding new capital for humanoid robot development, embodied AI research, and global market expansion.
The Shenzhen-based company builds full-size humanoid robots and multi-form robotic platforms for embodied intelligence. The round was backed by new and existing investors including Stone Venture, Oriental Fortune Capital, and CoStone Capital, with LimX saying the funding will support R&D, product iteration, and market expansion in China and overseas. The Series B follows LimX’s Series A and A+ rounds in early 2025, which together brought in RMB 500M.
The company is not only building a full-size humanoid. Its portfolio also includes TRON, a multi-modal robot platform, and TRON 2, a modular system designed to switch between bipedal, wheeled, and dual-arm configurations. LimX describes itself as an AI-first robotics company building full-size humanoid robots and products such as the TRON platform.
Source: Limx dynamics TRON 2
The idea is embodied AI needs hardware that can test locomotion, manipulation, whole-body control, and vision-language-action policies across different morphologies. TRON 2 gives LimX a research and developer platform that sits between a full humanoid and a narrow lab robot, with a 7-DoF robotic arm, a 70cm reach, a spherical wrist, front camera coverage across the arm span, and support for multiple operating forms.
The funding therefore sits inside a broader product-stack strategy. LimX can use full-size humanoids for human-scale work, TRON-style platforms for embodied AI research, and semi-humanoid or wheeled configurations for cases where manipulation matters more than walking. That gives the company a wider experimental surface than a single bipedal robot, especially as robotics companies test where humanoid form factors are useful and where simpler mobility layers are more practical.
LimX also fits the wider Chinese embodied-intelligence funding wave. Chinese humanoid companies are raising large rounds while building portfolios that often include bipedal humanoids, wheeled humanoids, quadrupeds, dexterous hands, and developer platforms. The market is not sorting only around who can build the most human-looking robot. It is also sorting around which companies can produce hardware families that feed data, developer use, and eventual task deployment.
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