Punyo is a soft-bodied humanoid robot research platform from the Toyota Research Institute (TRI), debuted in early 2024. Its name comes from the Japanese word "punyo" (ぷにょ), describing something soft, cute, and resilient. Punyo is built to explore whole-body manipulation — the idea that robots, like people, should carry bulky objects using their chest, arms, and hips together, not just their hands and fingertips. It is a torso-up humanoid (no legs), and it represents TRI's vision for safe, capable future home robots.
Availability
Punyo is a research platform, not a product — there is no price or purchasing path. TRI explicitly frames it as a robot for whole-body-manipulation research, complementing TRI's separate work on fine fingertip dexterity. TRI stated design goals for the broader concept: soft, interactive, affordable, safe, durable, and capable.
Full Specifications
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Debut | Early 2024 (Toyota Research Institute) |
| Type | Torso-up soft humanoid research platform (no legs) |
| Underlying structure | Two "hard" robot arms, a rigid torso frame, and a waist actuator |
| Soft covering | Air-filled bladders ("bubbles") cover the arms; each adds ~5 cm of compliance and can be individually pressurized to a chosen stiffness |
| Force sensing | Bubbles connect via tubes to pressure sensors that detect forces on the outer surface |
| End effectors | "Paws" — single high-friction latex bubbles with an internal camera; a printed dot pattern is watched for deformation to estimate forces |
| Coverage | Hands, arms, and chest covered with compliant materials and tactile sensors |
| Purpose | Whole-body manipulation of large, bulky objects (e.g., lifting a water jug, closing a drawer) |
Significance
Punyo embodies a distinct design philosophy: combine the precision, strength, and reliability of traditional "hard" robots with the compliance, impact resistance, and simple sensing of soft-robotic systems. By using its whole body — chest, arms, friction, and compliance — Punyo can hold and manipulate large objects with less energy than a hands-only robot, which TRI argues could enable lighter, lower-cost, safer home robots. It is a research statement about what Toyota thinks domestic robots should be: safe and pleasant to work alongside.
Punyo vs Related Robots
- Punyo vs Toyota T-HR3: Both are Toyota humanoid research efforts; T-HR3 explores teleoperation and flexible joints, Punyo explores soft whole-body manipulation.
- Punyo vs 1X NEO Gamma: Both pursue soft, human-safe designs for the home — NEO Gamma as a shipping consumer product, Punyo as a research platform.
- Punyo vs Clone Robotics Clone Alpha: Both rethink robot hardware away from rigid links — Punyo via pneumatic soft bubbles, Clone Alpha via water-hydraulic artificial muscles.
Source: Toyota Research Institute







