French startup unveils non-humanoid robot as AI race moves to physical machines
French robotics startup Genesis AI, backed by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, has unveiled its first general-purpose robot Eno, which features a wheeled base and foldable tower instead of a humanoid form.

Genesis AI, a French robotics startup backed by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, unveiled its first general-purpose robot on Tuesday, marking a shift in AI development from chatbots to physical machines.
The robot, named Eno, breaks from the humanoid design typically favored by leading manufacturers. Instead of legs, it features a wheeled base, a foldable tower, and hands that the company says match the form of a human hand.
Driven by advances in AI, the global robotics market is expanding rapidly, though technical challenges remain, mainly concerning processing power and battery life. A Reuters/Ipsos poll this month showed 53 percent of Americans were concerned that AI would put them or someone in their household out of work.
Founded in early 2025, Genesis AI has raised $105 million (€90.6 million), one of France's largest and matching the record seed round of Mistral AI – Europe's leading AI company. The company's valuation was not immediately available.
Eno runs on Genesis's own AI model and is not built to look like humans, but to extend human capabilities, according to the company. Genesis AI plans to begin production and targeted customer deployments by the end of 2026, starting with logistics and manufacturing customers, followed by hotels, hospitals and consumers.
In a statement, Schmidt said the robot's breakthrough will not replace human expertise, but rather "amplify it" to unlock what he called "one of the largest economic opportunities of the AI era."
Vivian Sun, Vice President of Commercial and Strategy at Genesis AI, told Reuters that the wheeled base was chosen because most industrial customers operate on flat floors, adding that legs would only make sense for use cases like climbing stairs. "We are mimicking humans in capabilities, not in form. Humans can go up and down, and so does the robot, but through this foldable design," she said.


