Insider Brief
- Doozy Robotics is expanding across the U.S., the Gulf region and Asia as the Singapore-based humanoid robotics startup prepares for a planned Series A and scales its AI-powered industrial workforce platform.
- The company is building a vertically integrated ecosystem combining humanoid robots, autonomous mobile robots and autonomous forklifts coordinated through its Eywa-OS orchestration platform, with its Industrial Super Humanoid slated to launch in the third quarter of 2026.
- Doozy said it enters the expansion phase with a pipeline exceeding $200 million, a $144 million memorandum of understanding with a large industrial customer and customer engagements including Daimler, Carrier and VitaQuest.
Singapore-based humanoid robotics startup Doozy Robotics announced it is expanding operations across the U.S., the Gulf region and Asia as it works to scale its AI-powered industrial workforce platform ahead of a planned Series A round. Backed by investors including Cocoon Capital, the company is developing a vertically integrated system that combines humanoid robots, autonomous mobile robots and autonomous forklifts coordinated through its proprietary Eywa-OS orchestration platform, according to Doozy.
The company, founded by Suresh Chandrasekar and Ajmal Thahseen, said Eywa-OS is designed to function as an AI-driven operational layer capable of interpreting production goals, assigning work across fleets of machines and adapting to changing factory conditions in real time. Its Industrial Super Humanoid platform is scheduled to launch in the third quarter of 2026.
Doozy noted long-term labor shortages as a driver of adoption and cited demographic and workforce trends, including aging labor pools and slowing workforce growth, as factors reshaping industrial automation demand. Rather than selling standalone robots, Doozy is extending the robot-as-a-service model into a subscription-based autonomous workforce offering that allows customers to scale deployments as production needs shift.
“We are building the Physical AI workforce that will power the next era of manufacturing,” CEO and co-founder Suresh Chandrasekar said in the announcement. “By combining humanoids, autonomous systems, and Eywa-OS orchestration, we are enabling facilities to operate with intelligence at scale. This expansion into the U.S. marks a critical step towards that vision.”
Doozy reported that it enters the expansion phase with a global pipeline exceeding $200 million, a $144 million memorandum of understanding with a large industrial customer and a pilot humanoid deployment underway with a U.S. pharmaceutical company. The company also said customers and engagements span organizations including Daimler, Carrier and VitaQuest.
Image credit: Doozy Robotics