Chinese humanoid robot startup Noetix Robotics has revealed how it achieved a sub-iPhone price point for its new consumer robot Bumi, following a fresh Pre-B funding round. The company recently raised nearly RMB 300 million (US$41 million) led by Vertex Ventures. Priced at RMB 9,998 (around US$1,380) — roughly the same as Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro Max, which starts at RMB 9,999 in China (US$1,199 in the U.S.) — the 94 cm humanoid has quickly become one of the most talked-about entries in China’s fast-moving robotics market.
Why it matters:While most humanoid robots remain far beyond consumer affordability, Bumi’s price-performance ratio has set a new cost baseline for the industry. The model’s combination of mass-market pricing, rapid sell-through, and venture backing signals a shift in how Chinese startups are engineering humanoids for large-scale adoption rather than showcase value.
Details:Noetix said over 100 units were sold in the first hour, with the first 500 gone within two days on JD.com. Founder Jiang Zheyuan said the record-low price was achieved by reengineering three key cost pillars:
- Vertical integration: Noetix designs its own control boards and motor drivers rather than purchasing standard modules, removing supplier markups and aligning hardware–software performance optimization in-house.
- Structural rework: By adopting composite materials with metal reinforcement only where necessary, the team cut total weight to 12 kilograms — a reduction that enabled smaller motors, lighter batteries, and cascading cost savings.
- Localized supply chain: Almost 100 percent of components, from motors and sensors to Rockchip processors, are sourced domestically, taking advantage of China’s dense manufacturing network for faster iteration and lower logistics costs.
Context:Noetix positions Bumi as a robot for education and family entertainment rather than household labor, focusing first on engagement and accessibility before humanoids evolve into general-purpose helpers.
- The company aims to scale production to 1,000 units per month by late 2025, with factories in Beijing and Changzhou and a third site in planning.
- The 94 cm form factor is designed to avoid the “uncanny valley” effect among children and to fit into classrooms and living rooms.
- Bumi integrates with JD.com’s Joy Inside 2.0 ecosystem and offers open programming interfaces, reflecting Noetix’s push toward a participatory developer platform.
As humanoid robotics enters its cost-reduction era, Noetix’s approach — grounded in engineering pragmatism rather than hype — could accelerate the transition from prototypes to products that ordinary consumers can actually own.
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