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Medusa
Addverb
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Medusa
AddverbThe extracted facts for 'Medusa' are severely fragmented across at least three entirely unrelated systems: (1) Addverb Technologies' autonomous forklift robot (warehouse robotics), (2) Medusa's Makeup monthly beauty subscription box, (3) Medusa.js, an open-source e-commerce framework, and (4) a 3D-printing multi-material prototype called Medusa. No coherent single 'Medusa' robotics system can be synthesized from these facts. The only robotics-relevant content is Addverb's autonomous forklift (branded separately, not 'Medusa') and a Reddit community note about servo backlash in a 3D-printing prototype called 'Medusa.' The autonomy verdict is therefore limited to the 3D-printing Medusa prototype, which is a human-built prototype with reported hardware reliability issues, not an autonomous system.
Availability
Specification
- candidate_1_payload
- 1,000 kg or 2,000 kg (two variants)
- candidate_1_speed
- Up to 1.5 m/s
- candidate_1_runtime
- Up to 8 hours; 1.5-hour charge time
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the Addverb deep report
Addverb has deployed robots across 500+ warehouses in 25 countries for 350+ clients, including Maersk, DHL, and PepsiCo
Deployment scale and client names are stated on Addverb's official site [1] and LinkedIn [8]; no independent customer confirmation, press release from Maersk/DHL/PepsiCo, or third-party audit verifies the aggregate figures or named-client relationships.
from Addverb deep report →Addverb's Concinity WES dynamically assigns tasks to robots in real time without human task-level intervention, constituting genuinely autonomous fleet operation
The software stack description (Optimus WMS, Concinity WES, Movect FMS) is confirmed by the official blog [4] and a partner page [6], but no independent operational review or customer testimony verifies that human intervention is genuinely absent during normal task execution at scale.
from Addverb deep report →Addverb manufactures all hardware and software in-house, positioning it as a fully vertically integrated robotics company
The in-house design and manufacturing claim originates solely from Addverb's own PR Newswire press release [5]; no independent supply-chain audit, manufacturing facility visit report, or third-party verification of vertical integration has been identified.
from Addverb deep report →Addverb is developing humanoid robots and quadrupeds, targeting these as future product lines funded by a planned ~$100M raise
The planned fundraise and humanoid/quadruped development roadmap are reported by Business Today via Facebook [13] and LinkedIn [8], but the raise has not been confirmed as closed and no prototype, demo, or technical specification for these platforms has been publicly disclosed.
from Addverb deep report →Addverb secured a $132M Series B led by Reliance Industries in March 2022 and holds a ~$200M order book with ~50% international revenue
The $132M Series B is corroborated by PR Newswire [5] and LinkedIn [8], but the order-book and revenue-mix figures are vendor-reported only [8]; the exact nature of Reliance's stake (investor vs. acquirer) remains unresolved per conflicting Owler [12] and LinkedIn data.
from Addverb deep report →
Addverb's vendor-claimed performance figures: 3–4× operational efficiency improvement, 99.99% picking accuracy, and up to 170% increase in daily order fulfillment
These figures appear only on the Zion Solutions Group partner page [6] citing Addverb's own marketing; no independent audit, customer disclosure, or third-party benchmark corroborates any of the three specific metrics.
from Addverb deep report →
About the company
Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.