Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
After successfully selling over 15 cars, Faraday Future would now like you to buy its robots
tech

After successfully selling over 15 cars, Faraday Future would now like you to buy its robots

Engadget · Jun 24, 2026, 11:22 PM

Key takeaways

  • Faraday Future Faraday Future would like you to purchase an $89,900 robot.
  • The business generated a fair bit of hype years before it showed off its first production-ready electric car at CES 2017.
  • But now it seems to be taking a page from Tesla's book and directing more energy into robotics.

Faraday Future Faraday Future would like you to purchase an $89,900 robot. As part of its latest revamp, the embattled electric car company is now pitching a lineup of robots, including humanoids, quadrupeds and a robotic arm. If that name doesn't ring any bells, that could be because the company has been going through a bit of a pivot over the past year in an attempt to salvage its bottom line, if not its reputation.

That's become something of a theme for Faraday. The business generated a fair bit of hype years before it showed off its first production-ready electric car at CES 2017. Its leaders certainly had lofty goals. But in the almost decade since, both the business and its founder, YT Jia, experienced financial tumult. Compounded by about a dozen lawsuits, internal turmoil, layoffs and yet more confusion around money, a lot of Faraday's plans went on hold. It showed. In January 2025, it said it had sold "15 or 16" vehicles.

However, Faraday Future returned to CES that year promising a new electric minivan and a "fresh start." The return of founder YT Jia as sole global CEO in May of this year as part of a larger executive shakeup might mean a loose definition of "fresh." The company is still putting work into its EV strategy, with the first pre-production model of its FX Super One MPV van completed in December. But now it seems to be taking a page from Tesla's book and directing more energy into robotics.

Article preview — originally published by Engadget. Full story at the source.
Read full story on Engadget → More top stories
Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from Engadget alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop