Origami v1.0 is our first open hardware and software robot — designed from the start for schools, universities, small businesses, and anyone who's been priced out of the conversation so far.
Under $5,000. Every schematic, every model, every line of code: open. Physical layer fully customisable — swap parts, modify joints, rebuild it after you've crashed it. That's not a bug. That's the point.
Print it yourself, order in bulk, or teach it through our platform. Everything you build in simulation transfers directly to the physical robot.
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Industrial drawing
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Origami v1.0 assembled
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Open hardware — built to be modified
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Safe around children by design
Small enough to be safe. Light enough to matter.
We're targeting a payload of 600g to 1kg. Light enough that it's safe around children, hobbyists, and anyone who isn't a trained technician. Small enough to sit on a desk or operate in a classroom without a safety perimeter. This isn't a toy. But it is something a curious twelve-year-old can interact with without a liability waiver.
Getting it built — and teaching people to use it.
Hardware is harder than software. We're working through the full supply chain — sourcing, fabrication, quality control — with manufacturing partners in Japan, where precision and robotics culture intersect in ways that are hard to replicate elsewhere.
Alongside the hardware, we're releasing a full course taught by robotics researchers who are actively building in the field. Available in English, Japanese, Portuguese, and Spanish from day one. Because a teacher in São Paulo and a student in Osaka shouldn't have to wait for a translation.
The loop closes here.
Everything in Pillar 1 was designed with Origami in mind. The simulation environment connects directly to Origami's platform. What you teach in the browser transfers to the physical robot. The same interface. The same AI. No re-training, no re-coding, no translation layer between digital and physical.
You learn in simulation. You test on our fleet. You deploy to Origami. One loop, from curiosity to a robot you can hold in your hands.