You’ll Never Have a Robot Best Friend

Stuck between the expensive toys we don’t want and companions they’re still not

Lance Ulanoff
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Pleo robot (Credit: Lance Ulanoff)

I gently pulled the decaying Pleo down off a top shelf in my office.

The once energetic robot toy hadn’t been touched in years. Its battery depleted and rubber skin frayed and split. Still a cute simulacrum of what might be best described as an almost Disney Camarasaurus, its face smiled up at me and I felt a tiny pang.

15 years after Ugobe and inventor Caleb Chung tried to shake up the typically sleepy consumer robotics market and launch their $349 companion robot, Pleo is largely forgotten. It was a big deal back in its day.

As then Editor-in-chief of PC Magazine and a bit of a robotics nerd, I tracked Pleo from development to launch and, in many ways, the final product lived up to its promises.

Adorable? Yes. Lifelike? Sure. However, it was also an impressive piece of technology with smooth motion, sensors, and early “learning” intelligence that allowed Pleo to slowly reveal its true self to you the more you played with it. To be clear, the $349 robot was not a toy or intended for children. Much like Sony AIBO before it (then on its way to its first decommissioning and years before its more recent rebirth), it was a plaything for adults, people…

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