Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Chinese humanoid startup raised $291M at $2.9B valuation; R1 Pro robot and G0 VLA foundation model; $435M+ raised in early 2026;
Galaxea AI is a Chinese humanoid robotics company developing full-body robots and foundation models for physical AI. Founded with a focus on general-purpose humanoid robots capable of performing complex physical tasks, Galaxea has built both hardware platforms and the underlying vision-language-action (VLA) models that control them. Its robots are designed to operate in unstructured real-world environments, a key differentiator from industrial robots confined to structured factory lines.\n\nGalaxea's primary product is the R1 Pro humanoid robot, a bipedal platform capable of dexterous manipulation and dynamic locomotion. The company also develops the G0 VLA model, a multimodal foundation model trained on robot interaction data that enables generalized task execution. Its approach combines hardware-software co-design with large-scale simulation-to-real transfer, targeting manufacturing, logistics, and service industry deployments where human-shaped bodies provide workflow compatibility advantages.\n\nGalaxea AI raised $291M in a funding round that valued the company at $2.9B, with cumulative funding exceeding $435M as of April 2026. This places Galaxea among the most highly capitalized humanoid robotics startups globally, competing in a sector that has seen massive investment alongside Figure, Physical Intelligence, and Agility Robotics. The company is one of China's most prominent entrants in the global humanoid robot race, positioning itself as both a hardware manufacturer and an AI model company.
Stuttgart German industrial/technology conglomerate (private) at €90.5B 2024 sales (-1%); 417,900 employees, automotive EV transition (traction inverters, heat pumps), North America +5% vs Europe -5%, EBIT margin 3.5%.
Robert Bosch GmbH is a Stuttgart, Germany-based global technology and industrial company — privately owned by the Robert Bosch Stiftung (charitable foundation, approximately 94% economic interest) and the Bosch family — operating as one of the world's largest private companies with €90.5 billion in 2024 sales (-1% year-over-year nominally) and 417,900 employees (-3% from 2023) across four business sectors: Mobility Solutions (automotive technology), Industrial Technology (drives, automation, and packaging technology), Consumer Goods (home appliances under Bosch and NEFF/Siemens brands, and Bosch Professional and DIY power tools), and Energy and Building Technology (HVAC, security systems, and building automation). In 2024, Bosch's geographic performance diverged sharply: North America grew 5% while Europe declined 5%, reflecting the strength of the US industrial and construction market against Europe's automotive industry contraction. EBIT margin was 3.5% — below Bosch's historical target range — as the Mobility Solutions automotive division was pressured by the slowdown in global automotive production, particularly the deceleration of electric vehicle ramp-up (after the initial EV surge slowed) and customer inventory corrections at major automotive OEM customers. CEO Stefan Hartung leads Bosch through a significant automotive technology transition — from combustion engine systems (fuel injection, braking, steering) toward electric vehicle components (eBike motors, EV traction inverters, heat pumps) and autonomous vehicle sensors (radar, lidar, camera systems).
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