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RoboForce Launches Titan AI Robot and Secures $15M to Scale Industrial Automation

Image Source: ChatGPT-4o
RoboForce Launches Titan AI Robot and Secures $15M to Scale Industrial Automation
Robotics startup RoboForce has launched its first AI-powered product family, Titan, built for high-precision industrial deployment in complex outdoor environments. The announcement comes as the company marks several growth milestones since emerging from stealth in January, including a new $5 million funding round that brings its total early-stage investment to $15 million.
Designed to meet the physical demands of industries such as solar energy, mining, and manufacturing, Titan blends adaptive hardware with spatial intelligence to automate labor-intensive tasks. The system is already drawing interest from early partners and investors, as RoboForce moves toward full-scale commercialization by the end of 2025.
Introducing Titan: A New Standard for Robo-Labor
Titan is built to handle real-world industrial challenges through a combination of modular hardware, AI-hardware co-optimization, and a continuously learning software system powered by Domain Intelligence. It is available in both wheeled and tracked versions, with additional formats in development.
The robot supports five fundamental capabilities critical to industrial work—Pick, Place, Press, Twist, and Connect—and boasts:
1mm precision for delicate tasks
40kg payload capacity
1100mm of arm reach
8-hour runtime on a single charge
These features are designed to enable safe, high-performance automation in environments where traditional robotics have struggled.
“We’re excited about the official launch of Titan,” said RoboForce founder and CEO Leo Ma. “Titan marks just the beginning—we’re excited to share more breakthroughs in the near future. The additional funding demonstrates the confidence in our vision to elevate humans beyond dull, dirty, and dangerous work.”
Growth Milestones and Strategic Expansion
Since its public debut in early 2025, RoboForce has:
Grown customer engagement across multiple sectors, including solar, mining, manufacturing, and space
Opened a new headquarters in Milpitas, CA, with expanded development and testing facilities
Updated its website to support growing public and investor interest
Continued to build out its engineering team as it scales toward commercial deployment
The company’s robots are already helping early pilot customers reduce labor costs by 33%, shorten deployment times by 90%, and maintain consistent performance across variable project conditions.
These efficiency gains are made possible by Titan’s self-evolving spatial AI copilot, which allows the system to learn rapidly from site conditions and operate alongside human teams and other machines.
Looking Ahead
With new capital in hand, a larger engineering footprint, and multiple pilot programs launching this summer, RoboForce is preparing to scale its platform throughout 2025. Titan’s debut positions the company as a serious contender in the push to redefine industrial labor through AI and robotics.
Backed by strong investor support and growing demand for field-ready automation, RoboForce is now hiring across AI and robotics disciplines to accelerate what it calls the future of “Robo-Labor.”
For more information, visit roboforce.ai.
What This Means
The launch of Titan signals more than a technical milestone—it reflects a growing push to reimagine how physical labor is distributed between humans and machines. In industries like mining, manufacturing, solar, and space infrastructure, dangerous working conditions remain a persistent challenge.
When I interviewed RoboForce founder Leo Ma last month, he emphasized the company’s mission to reduce human exposure to high-risk environments by developing robots that can handle precision tasks in harsh, unpredictable settings.
Titan isn’t designed to replace human judgment or flexibility—it’s built to take on the most physically punishing tasks, allowing human workers to focus on oversight, creativity, and problem-solving. That shift is part of a broader trend in industrial automation, where safety and adaptability are now as important as efficiency.
By positioning robots as collaborators rather than replacements, RoboForce is advancing a vision of automation that aims to protect people, not just cut costs. If successful, this approach could help set a new standard for how AI and robotics are deployed in the most demanding sectors of the global economy.
Editor’s Note: This article was created by Alicia Shapiro, CMO of AiNews.com, with writing, image, and idea-generation support from ChatGPT, an AI assistant. However, the final perspective and editorial choices are solely Alicia Shapiro’s. Special thanks to ChatGPT for assistance with research and editorial support in crafting this article.