Daimon Robotics Technology Co., Ltd., a Hong Kong–based company, is presenting its technologies at CES 2026, the world’s largest technology exhibition, taking place in Las Vegas from January 6 to 9, 2026. The company’s booth is located at the Las Vegas Convention Center (LVCC), North Hall, Booth 11124.
At CES 2026, Daimon Robotics is showcasing its Force / Tactile Feedback Teleoperation Data Acquisition System — DM-EXton2. According to the company, the system is worn by the user and enables the robot to replicate human movements with 1:1 precision. The system also supports ultra-fine manipulation tasks.
The company defines its core focus as providing robots with tactile perception, emphasizing that robots should not only see their environment but also perceive and manipulate it through touch.
Daimon Robotics Technology Co., Ltd. operates in the field of embodied intelligence and was incubated by the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST). The company was co-founded by Professor Michael Yu Wang, Founding Director of the HKUST Robotics Institute, and Dr. Duan Jianghua.
Professor Michael Yu Wang, one of the company’s co-founders, was elected to the Administrative Committee (AdCom) of the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society (IEEE RAS) in 2021 and has since been re-elected for two consecutive terms. This reflects Daimon Robotics’ alignment with internationally leading research topics such as embodied intelligence and human–robot collaboration.
The key technologies and products presented by Daimon Robotics at CES 2026 include:
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DM-Tac Series Optical Tactile Sensors – These sensors integrate 40,000 tactile sensing units per square centimeter, a density several times higher than human skin. The product has entered mass production since April last year, reaching an industrial scale of 10,000 units.
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DM-EXton Series Teleoperation Data Acquisition Systems – Designed to collect robot motion data and used for training VTLA/VLA multimodal embodied intelligence models.
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Optical Tactile Dexterous Hands and Grippers – These devices can adjust grasping strategies based on the material, shape, and hardness of target objects and provide precise force control.
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Daimon One – A Vision–Tactile–Language–Action (VTLA) multimodal manipulation model that integrates visual, tactile, and linguistic inputs to predict action outputs.
According to the company, these technologies support robots in performing more precise actions in complex scenarios and adapting to a wide range of applications.
Daimon Robotics presents its technologies on-site at CES 2026, introducing new tactile-perception-based capabilities for robotic systems to visitors and industry professionals.
