Meta Acquires Assured Robot Intelligence to Fast-Track Humanoid Robotics Push
Companies·2 min read·TechCrunch

Meta Acquires Assured Robot Intelligence to Fast-Track Humanoid Robotics Push

Meta has bought robotics-AI startup Assured Robot Intelligence, founded by Lerrel Pinto and Xiaolong Wang, folding the team into Superintelligence Labs to build foundation models for humanoid machines.

Share:

Meta announced on May 1, 2026 that it has acquired Assured Robot Intelligence (ARI), a startup building foundation models for humanoid robots, in a deal whose financial terms were not disclosed. The acquisition gives Meta a turnkey research team focused squarely on the AI brain that has to sit behind any general-purpose robot — and slots that team directly into Meta Superintelligence Labs, the unit Mark Zuckerberg has been packing with hires for the company's AGI push.

ARI was co-founded by Lerrel Pinto, a former NYU faculty member who previously co-founded Fauna Robotics before Amazon acquired it in March 2026, and Xiaolong Wang, an associate professor at UC San Diego and a former NVIDIA researcher. Meta described the company as operating "at the frontier of robotic intelligence" with models designed to let robots understand, predict, and adapt to human behavior in dynamic environments. ARI had raised an undisclosed seed round from AIX Ventures before the exit; both co-founders are joining Meta along with the rest of the team.

The startup's stated mission — building foundation models so humanoid machines can do household chores and other physical labor — maps almost exactly onto a leaked 2025 Meta memo outlining the company's plan to ship consumer-oriented humanoid robots, including both the AI brains and the hardware. Meta's robotics group already designs sensors, software, and other components it intends to license to manufacturers, positioning the company less as a single robot maker and more as the would-be Android of humanoid platforms.

The deal also reflects a hardening conviction inside Meta that pure language modeling is hitting diminishing returns, and that the next leap toward artificial general intelligence may require physical-world training data only embodied agents can collect. Robotics has become the must-have division for AI labs: Amazon scooped up Fauna Robotics in March, NVIDIA keeps releasing Isaac GR00T models, Sony AI's table-tennis Project Ace just landed a Nature cover, and a growing list of well-funded startups — Figure, 1X, Apptronik, Recursive Superintelligence — is racing to put a humanoid into a warehouse before Apple or Tesla can.

For Meta, ARI delivers two things money normally can't buy fast: a coherent founding team with academic pedigree and a working stack of robot foundation models. Bolting both onto Superintelligence Labs gives Zuckerberg a credible humanoid play just as the rest of the industry concedes that the road to AGI now runs through robots, not just chatbots. The price Meta paid is undisclosed, but the strategic logic is loud: the company that controls the model stack for humanoids will sit at the center of whatever the next decade of consumer hardware turns out to look like.

Related Articles