Galbot S1vsUnitree Aliengo
Close call. S1 and Aliengo trade wins across the matrix.
S1
1 wins
Aliengo
1 wins
Category breakdown
Deploy & operate
Readiness, uptime, navigation & connectivity
- 72Deployment readiness72
- 60Maintenance confidence60
- Vision-led navigation (estimated)NavigationVision-led navigation (estimated)
- Wi-Fi / cloud fleet management (estimated)ConnectivityWi-Fi / cloud fleet management (estimated)
Cost & ROI
Price accessibility and ROI clarity
- 30Price accessibility59
- 45ROI clarity62
Capability
Payload, speed, runtime & labor replacement
- 78Labor replacement55
- 50 kg dual-arm continuous capacityPayloadup to 13 kg
- —Speed>1.5 m/s max walking speed
- Up to 8 hours on a single charge; dual-battery quick-swap design enables autonomous battery replacement for 24/7 operationBattery2.5–4.6 h operating time
Fit & future
Environment fit, footprint & long-term upside
- 68Environment fit78
- 82Future potential75
- —Footprint650 × 310 × 600 mm (stand); 600 × 310 × 150 mm (fold)
S1 · Best for
Battery cell assembly on CATL production lines with repetitive 30–50 kg transfer cycles.
Aliengo · Best for
University SLAM and robotics coursework: 4.6 h endurance, developer-friendly I/O (GbE, USB 3.0), and ROS support enable weeks of lab experiments and student projects without infrastructure lock-in.
Final judgment
Both are credible picks. Decide on cost and supplier proximity, not capability — the gap is small.

