Danny Weber
20:05 21-10-2025
© AIMOGA
EXEED’s AiMOGA unveils a car + humanoid robot ecosystem, featuring the Mornine robot, the MoNet model, and an L3 architecture for adaptive, AI-driven mobility.
At a conference in China, EXEED’s AiMOGA Robotics announced the next phase of its strategy: fusing artificial intelligence, robotics, and automotive technology. The company unveiled a “Car + Humanoid Robot” concept designed to build an ecosystem where vehicles and robots work with people—and with each other—to handle everyday tasks. The framing shifts mobility from a standalone product to a piece of a broader human–machine environment.
AiMOGA highlighted advances in its humanoid robot Mornine, now able not only to hold conversations and showcase products, but also to perform business functions. It also introduced an updated L3-level technology architecture that enables robots to adapt to their surroundings on their own. The system rests on a 17-joint mechanical design, multimodal perception, a language model with cloud intelligence, and imitation learning that brings the platform closer to autonomous behavior.
In addition, AiMOGA presented MoNet, a large vision-language model built to understand human requests, analyze intent, and sustain dialogue in several languages. The company has also launched a Collaborative Innovation Center, where engineers combine automotive and robotics know-how with the goal of building a platform for interaction between transport and AI. The approach signals a push to blur the line between vehicles and service robots.
AiMOGA has already showcased its developments in 30 countries and has become the first company globally to receive dual EU certification for a humanoid robot. Company representatives characterize this as the start of a new era—one in which the car and the robot function as complementary parts of a single intelligent ecosystem. The ambition is clear; how quickly this ecosystem takes shape will depend on execution.