Among the more eye-catching robots we spotted on the CES 2026 show floor was SuperDog, a quadruped companion robot from Vbot, which was demonstrated autonomously navigating a public booth environment.
Rather than remaining stationary or controlled remotely, SuperDog was shown navigating around visitors, adjusting its movement based on nearby activity and responding to voice prompts without visible operator intervention.
Vbot says the robot is built on a three-layer intelligence system that combines embodied intelligence, spatial intelligence, and agent intelligence, allowing it to interpret its surroundings and carry out tasks without continuous cloud connectivity.
The robot uses articulated legs designed to handle uneven surfaces, stairs and changes in floor height, which were demonstrated on the show floor across different surface types.
SuperDog is equipped with a 594Wh battery, with Vbot claiming up to five hours of continuous outdoor operation, depending on usage and terrain.
Sensor hardware includes 360-degree LiDAR, ultra-wideband positioning, dual depth cameras and onboard microphones, all feeding into local processing hardware rated at 128 TOPS.
According to Vbot, SuperDog’s onboard compute delivers up to 128 TOPS of AI performance on which can enable real-time perception and decision-making without relying on cloud processing.
Vbot also says on-device processing is intended to reduce latency and allow the robot to operate reliably in environments with limited or inconsistent connectivity.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
SuperDog is positioned as a multi-purpose companion robot, with use cases including hands-free filming, carrying small loads, following users on outdoor routes and assisting in everyday tasks.
Vbot has not confirmed pricing or regional availability, but says SuperDog is part of its broader push to bring autonomous companion robots closer to consumer use cases rather than purely industrial applications.
The company expects to share more details on commercial plans later in 2026.
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