Aria could be your AI robot girlfriend — For $175,000

[This Forbes report from the 2025 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) describes a, expensive new humanoid robot named Aria designed to evoke rich medium-as-social-actor presence. See the original version for a second image and the mentioned 43 second video (also on YouTube). Coverage from NDTV notes that the “Internet [is] fascinated and spooked”:

“A video of Aria and her facial expressions went viral on social media, triggering a sea of comments, ranging from fascination to abject horror as to what technology had transformed into. ‘I thought that was real at first. And she looks like somebody I just can’t think who,’ said one user, while another added: ‘Disturbing is an understatement.’ A third commented: ‘How people are so comfortable around these is crazy to me. Sh*t is lowkey creepy.’”

For what many will find a hilarious takedown of Aria and similar robot companions see TheGamer. For more information about Aria and other robots from Robotix, visit the company’s website. –Matthew]

This Could Be Your AI Robot Girlfriend — For $175,000

By Barry Collins, Senior Contributor
January 8, 2025

If the movie Her piqued your interest in an AI partner, a company at CES 2025 is willing to sell you a robot girlfriend — if you have $175,000 to spare.

Realbotix is an American firm with a range of AI robots that it claims can fulfill a variety of roles, including acting as a brand representative at a sales booth, as a companion for an elderly person or even as a romantic partner “to tackle the staggering loneliness epidemic.”

The robots range from a $12,000 bust — basically a talking head and shoulders that you might place on a table — to the top-of-the-range Aria, shown above. It’s a $175,000 model that can move its limbs and moves around on a circular plinth, like a mannequin riding a Roomba vacuum cleaner. There’s even a mid-range model costing $150,000 that can be disassembled and packaged into a suitcase to take with you.

‘Human-Like Robots’

Realbotix CEO Andrew Kiguel told me the company’s mission is to “create robots that are indistinguishable from humans.” The robots can be configured as either male or female, and the company claims it can even replicate historical figures or celebrities.

You can view the video [in the original story or on YouTube], shot on the CES 2025 show floor, to decide for yourself how close the company is to achieving its mission of lifelike robots, but my first impression is there’s a little way to go yet. The delay between it talking and its lips moving, the unnatural limb movements and the thousand-mile stare are not exactly Scarlett Johansson-grade realism.

Yet, Kiguel remains bullish about Aria’s abilities. “We think we have the most realistic robots in the world in terms of their appearance,” he said.

“There are two key things in robotics that are kind of like the nirvana. One is walking. We’re going to let the big guys like Tesla work on that. But the other key piece is facial expressions, and so we’re really keen on making robots that can create emotion, show you what they’re feeling,” he added.

Indeed, he argues that the emotional bond with a robot could grow so strong that you treat it as a partner. “We’re taking it to a different level that nobody else is really doing,” said Kiguel. “It can be like a romantic partner. It remembers who you are. It can act as a boyfriend or girlfriend. If you ever saw that movie Her, we’re trying to do that.”

Kiguel was quick to insist Aria was not a sex toy, “but it can have, what I would say, conversations of a more intimate nature,” he added.

Face Swap

Aria’s eyes aren’t just cosmetic — they’re hidden cameras used for visual recognition, meaning they can identify the person the robot is talking to and objects in its field of vision. For example, Kiguel said, it might spot that you’re eating an apple and ask how it tastes. It’s probably best not to offer Aria a bite, though.

And if you get tired of looking at Aria and fancy a change, you don’t have to go to the expense of buying a completely new robot — you can simply swap out its face. The “realistic” skin of the faces can be magnetically detached and replaced with a new visage. “You can actually remove the faces off our robots in under five seconds,” Kiguel said.

“The body parts are also modular, so we can actually pull them apart, put different faces on and create a whole new robotic character off the same chassis,” he added, comparing it to customizing the appearance of your car.

Just make sure to dress your robot in something appropriate before introducing it to your mother.


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