> At a Glance
> – LimX Dynamics introduces Oli, a 5-foot-5 programmable humanoid, to the US market
> – Smaller Tron 1 biped starts at $20,000 and swaps between flat feet, points, or wheels
> – Both EDU models ship now for researchers and universities
> – Why it matters: Early access to modular robots lets developers build custom autonomous skills
At a private demo in an empty hotel suite, Jonathan P. Miller tested LimX Dynamics’ first US-bound bots-Oli’s dance moves and Tron 1’s speedy wheel-mode-both ready for labs to hack.
Meet Oli: The Dancing Developer Platform
Oli arrived pre-loaded with roughly a dozen routines. A handheld remote cued each sequence, showing off joint flexibility rather than full autonomy.
The $60,000 EDU package targets universities and research teams who will write future self-driving code.
- Swappable head and hands for sensor or gripper upgrades
- 5-foot-5 aluminum frame rated for continuous motion demos
- API access to joint-level control
Tron 1: Small Bot, Big Versatility
Tron 1 stands shorter but trades height for speed. Clip-on wheel feet sent it scooting across the suite and spinning like a top.
Jonathan P. Miller kicked the unit over repeatedly; it self-righted every time, losing only a tiny plastic trim piece.
| Configuration | Top Speed | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Flat feet | Walk pace | Base |
| Point feet | Balanced | Base |
| Wheels | Sprint | Base |
Optional top modules add arms or extra sensors.

Price and Availability
Both robots are shipping today in limited quantities:
- Tron 1 EDU: from $20,000
- Oli EDU: from $60,000
LimX says higher-spec models will follow once developer feedback is folded in.
Key Takeaways
- Oli focuses on humanoid research with modular limbs
- Tron 1 offers low-cost, rugged bipedal testing
- Prices undercut many rival platforms while keeping hardware open
LimX Dynamics’ US debut gives labs two fresh options to push robotics beyond canned choreography.

