PaXini Tech used its appearance at the International Robot Exhibition (iREX 2025) in Tokyo to demonstrate two humanoid robots designed for tasks requiring tactile perception and mobility. The multi-dimensional tactile humanoid robot TORA-ONE prepared ice cream for visitors in a public demonstration of its operational precision and manipulation capabilities. The robot is intended for potential use in industrial, commercial, medical, household, and retail settings. The company also presented TORA DOUBLE ONE, a lightweight general-purpose humanoid robot that navigated steps during a mobility test aimed at showing its ability to operate on varied terrain.
These demonstrations accompanied the introduction of PaXini’s third-generation tactile sensor, the PX-6AX-GEN3. According to company specifications, the sensor collects multilayer magnetic-field data at sampling rates of several million times per second, outputs 15 categories of tactile information at 1000 Hz, and provides a micro-force resolution of 0.01 newton with repeatability under 0.5 percent of full scale.
PaXini also unveiled what it described as the first Hall-effect-based six-axis force sensor. The device uses polymer materials instead of steel, a design the company says reduces material aging and deformation while lowering production costs. The company presented its dexterous-hand products designed for fine manipulation tasks such as grasping test tubes, spheres, and cubes.
PaXini attributed the development of these systems to its investment in data resources for embodied-intelligence training. The company cited its Super EID Factory, which it describes as an omni-modal embodied-intelligence data facility generating about 200 million data entries each year through the OmniSharing database. PaXini used the event to outline its embodied-intelligence technologies and announced the launch of flagship stores on AliExpress and Amazon as part of its international expansion plans.
