Figure develops AI-powered humanoid robots designed to perform physical tasks in unpredictable human environments. The company is building what it positions as the world's first commercially viable general-purpose humanoid robot, targeting deployment across manufacturing, logistics, warehousing, and eventually home and elderly care settings. The technical challenge centers on autonomous navigation and task execution in environments designed for humans rather than structured factory floors - a problem the company notes has not been commercially solved at scale.
The company's approach combines advanced AI systems with humanoid form factors optimized for existing human infrastructure. Rather than redesigning workspaces for robots, Figure's architecture must handle the variability inherent in spaces built around human dimensions and workflows. The team brings over 100 years of combined experience in AI and humanoid robotics, addressing a market the company sizes at over 10 million unsafe or undesirable jobs going unfilled annually in the U.S. alone.
Figure's mission frames humanoid robotics as infrastructure for labor shortage mitigation and workplace safety improvement. The company is led by CEO Brett Adcock and operates from the United States with plans for global deployment. The technical domains span autonomous robotics, physical task automation, and AI systems capable of generalizing across multiple use cases rather than single-purpose applications. Success depends on solving the reliability and operational complexity challenges that have historically prevented commercial humanoid deployment outside controlled research environments.