Beijing (Gasgoo)- The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) opened in Las Vegas on January 6. At this year's show, Fourier Intelligence staged its first comprehensive overseas showcase of embodied-intelligence applications in real-world settings such as companion interaction, with the new-generation full-size humanoid "Care-bot" GR-3 taking center stage.
As Fourier's first product explicitly positioned as a "Care-bot," GR-3 adopts a Morandi warm-tone palette and uses supercar-grade upholstery with eco-friendly lining to soften the traditional robot's mechanical feel. The machine offers 55 degrees of freedom across the body, enabling flexible posture adjustments and high-precision tasks.

Image credit: Fourier Intelligence
GR-3 also carries a full-perception interaction system that integrates visual recognition, sound-source localization, and haptic feedback to enable natural human–robot interaction. Powered by an attention-management mechanism, it delivers a rapid closed-loop from multimodal sensing to intelligent decision-making and motion planning.
On the CES floor, a dedicated "game zone" let GR-3 challenge visitors to tic-tac-toe, showcasing its visual recognition, logical reasoning, and multimodal responses via facial expressions, speech, and movement. The robot also performed dance routines throughout the day, demonstrating fluid whole-body motion control and dynamic balance.

Image credit: Fourier Intelligence
Beyond GR-3, Fourier also unveiled a desktop "Care-bot" concept prototype built on the same IP. The doll-sized unit supports appearance customization and configurable interaction personas, exploring the possibility of around-the-clock emotional companionship in a lightweight form factor. It remains in early development.
To date, Fourier has served over 2,000 medical institutions and enterprise clients across more than 40 countries and regions, and has partnered with more than 20 leading universities, research institutes and technology companies worldwide. Its CES appearance highlights the company's global push as an embodied-intelligence solutions provider — and further underscores its strategy: rooted in rehab and eldercare, focused on interaction, and serving people.








