×
Skild AI’s universal robot brain goes starfish, adapts even after losing limbs
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Skild AI has developed an “omni-bodied brain” that allows a single AI model to control multiple types of robots and adapt to extreme physical damage, including continuing to operate after losing limbs. The breakthrough represents a significant step toward more generalized robotic intelligence that could work across any hardware platform, addressing a key limitation in current robotics where AI models are typically designed for specific robot types.

What you should know: The AI system can control unfamiliar robotic hardware and adapt to severe physical modifications without additional training.

  • When a four-legged robot’s limbs were cut off with a chainsaw, the AI algorithm quickly adapted to continue functioning with the remaining hardware.
  • The model generalizes across different robot body types, successfully controlling both two- and four-legged robots that weren’t included in its original training data.
  • In one test, a quadruped robot placed on its hind legs automatically began walking upright like a humanoid after sensing ground contact beneath its rear limbs.

How it works: Skild’s approach trains a single algorithm across numerous different physical robots performing various tasks, creating what the company calls “Skild Brain.”

  • The model uses in-context learning similar to large language models, breaking down complex problems and feeding solutions back into its processing loop.
  • Training involves gathering data from a wide range of robot types rather than focusing on individual systems through teleoperation or simulation.
  • The AI can adapt to modifications like tied-together legs, extended limbs, or deactivated motors by leveraging its broad training foundation.

In plain English: Think of traditional robot AI like a specialist doctor who only knows how to treat one type of patient. Skild’s approach is more like training a general practitioner who has seen thousands of different cases and can adapt their knowledge to handle new situations they’ve never encountered before.

Beyond walking robots: Skild is applying the same generalist approach to robot manipulation tasks.

  • The company trained Skild Brain on various simulated robot arms and found it could control unfamiliar hardware while adapting to environmental changes like reduced lighting.
  • Skild is already working with companies that use robot arms, according to CEO Deepak Pathak.

The big picture: Multiple companies are racing to develop more generally capable robot AI models, but Skild’s approach of generalizing across diverse hardware types sets it apart from competitors.

  • Toyota Research Institute and startup Physical Intelligence are also developing generalist robot AI models.
  • Pathak believes this represents the emergence of “physical superintelligence for robots,” comparing the potential breakthrough to the leap that produced modern language models and chatbots.

What they’re saying: “Any robot, any task, one brain. It is absurdly general,” Pathak explained about their omni-bodied brain concept.

  • “It is so exciting to me personally, dude,” he added regarding the results, though acknowledging they might seem “creepy to some.”

Follow the money: Skild AI raised $300 million in 2024 at a $1.5 billion valuation, reflecting investor confidence in generalized robotics AI.

This AI-Powered Robot Keeps Going Even if You Attack It With a Chainsaw

Recent News

AEO, or Answer Engine Optimization, is the ultimate epistemic bundler

When truth becomes manufactured rather than discovered, the highest bidders define facts.

Meta launches “Vibes,” a dedicated feed for AI-generated short videos

Critics worry the feature could flood feeds with low-quality "AI slop."

iOS 18 uses Apple Intelligence to fix Wallet’s broken order tracking

AI extracts purchase details from emails, bypassing years of merchant reluctance.