
SUNNYVALE, CA: After a week of cryptic teasers and cinematic anticipation, humanoid robotics company Figure has officially named and dated its next machine. In a coordinated announcement across X (formerly Twitter), both the company and its CEO Brett Adcock revealed that the long-awaited “Figure 03” will make its full debut on Thursday, October 9.
The reveal came with a striking computer-generated teaser, a minute-long visual symphony that finally shows the robot in full form. Gone are the shadows and silhouettes of earlier teasers; the Figure 03 is now fully illuminated in gleaming digital detail. Adcock paired the video with a confident declaration:
“Excited to unveil on Thursday the best humanoid robot the world has ever seen.”
Whether this is marketing bravado or an accurate prediction remains to be seen, but the teaser sets the stage for what could be one of the most significant unveilings in humanoid robotics this year.
A First Real Look: Figure 03 in Detail
The CGI showcase offers the most comprehensive glimpse yet at Figure’s next-generation humanoid. The Figure 03 continues the company’s minimalist design language, a smooth grayscale form accented with subtle purple highlights and deliberate texturing that blends elegance with utility.

Key Design Highlights
- Fabric Skin: The robot appears to be wrapped in a sleek, gray mesh fabric, giving it a soft, almost organic texture. Beyond style, the covering likely shields delicate actuators and wiring, balancing aesthetics and durability.
- Sensory Hands: Each hand is sheathed in a glove-like material with visible seams suggesting embedded tactile sensors. Cameras embedded in the palms indicate enhanced object recognition and manipulation, a step toward truly dexterous, human-like interaction.
- Articulated Feet: The Figure 03 walks on sculpted, jointed feet with a hollow arch and a flexible toe mechanism reminiscent of Tesla’s Optimus. This engineering suggests more stable balance and smoother walking dynamics.
- Wireless Power: Markings on the heel labeled “Inductive Charging” confirm that the robot can recharge simply by standing on a pad, a major step toward autonomous operation in industrial or domestic settings.
- Modular Design: Perhaps most intriguing, the teaser cycles through multiple “outfits” or external shells, hinting at modularity. The Figure 03 might adapt its appearance or protective casing depending on its role, from factory work to customer-facing environments.
A bold white “003” stamped on the side of the head confirms this unit as the successor to the Figure 02, which is currently undergoing trials at a BMW manufacturing facility.

From Hype to Hardware
This latest teaser brings clarity after days of speculation. Adcock has spent the past week dropping cryptic statements, including “This week, everything changes,” sparking widespread curiosity among robotics enthusiasts and investors alike.
While the teaser remains purely computer-generated, the attention to detail in Figure’s presentation suggests a company with serious intent. The visual polish underscores an important point: Figure is positioning the 03 not as a prototype, but as a product designed to operate in real-world environments alongside humans.

“We’re moving beyond cinematic hype into the age of embodied AI,” said one industry analyst on social media. “If the physical robot looks and moves like what we’re seeing here, Figure could reset expectations for the entire field.”

What’s Next
The robotics world has entered an arms race for humanoid design dominance. Tesla’s Optimus, Agility Robotics’ Digit, and Apptronik’s Apollo have all advanced the conversation, but none have yet proven large-scale commercial viability.
Figure aims to change that. By focusing on human-centered design, robust mobility, and continuous charging infrastructure, the Figure 03 could represent a major step toward robots that not only resemble us, but can actually work with us.
All eyes now turn to Thursday, October 9, when Figure’s promises will be put to the test. If the real machine lives up to the digital teaser, the “best humanoid robot in the world” might not be hyperbole; it might just be reality.


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