Figure 03 Sorted 250,000 Packages in 200 Hours — And Nobody Took a Break
Figure 03 Sorted 250,000 Packages in 200 Hours —
And Nobody Took a Break
It started as an 8-hour test. Then it kept going. And going. For 200 hours straight, three humanoid robots named Bob, Frank, and Gary sorted packages live on YouTube — while the internet watched, argued, and occasionally cheered.
Meet Figure 03. 173 cm, 61 kg, name tag optional. It just worked for 200 hours straight without a single complaint. (© Figure AI)
Here's a question nobody was asking two weeks ago: what happens when you put a humanoid robot on YouTube and just… don't turn it off?
On May 14, 2026, Figure AI CEO Brett Adcock got a public challenge from robotics expert Scott Walter. The claim: a humanoid robot can't sustain a real 8-hour work shift. Adcock's response was not a press release. He deployed a camera crew, set up three robots at the company's San Jose logistics test facility, and hit "go live" on YouTube.
What followed was… not what anyone expected. The robots didn't just survive the 8 hours. They kept going. And going. 200 hours later — the equivalent of a human working nine days without sleep — Figure AI popped champagne on camera. The internet had a lot of feelings about it.
Sources: The Asia Business Daily May 25, 2026 · Figure AI official announcement May 22, 2026 · Techiexpert.com May 27, 2026
What Bob, Frank, and Gary Actually Did
The task sounds simple. It isn't. A conveyor belt feeds in packages of all shapes, sizes, and wrapping types — cardboard boxes, plastic mailers, irregular parcels, slippery poly bags. The robot's job: pick up each package, identify the barcode, flip it face-down onto the scanner, and move on. Repeat, indefinitely.
Figure 03 chose its grip dynamically — one hand for lightweight plastic-wrapped items, two hands for larger boxes. When something was just out of reach, it stretched its upper body forward to retrieve it. When the barcode on a plastic parcel was hard to read, it pressed the package down with one hand to flatten it. None of this was pre-programmed move-by-move. All of it runs on Helix-02, Figure's onboard vision-language-action model. No cloud. No remote operator.
Viewers gave the robots names. Figure AI leaned into it, adding actual name tags — BOB, Frank, Gary, and ROSE — to the robots mid-stream. The comments section turned into something between a factory floor report and a reality TV fan page. One Redditor noted the robots were "stealing jobs from warehouse workers AND streamers." Fair point.
"BOB" at work. LIVE indicator top right. Package count: 115,492. Timer: 92:59:03. This wasn't edited. This was a continuous livestream. (© Figure AI)
The Human vs. Machine Moment Everyone Shared
Halfway through the stream, Figure AI staged a 10-hour head-to-head between an intern named Aimé and Figure 03. The scoreboard was visible on screen the whole time. When the shift ended, the numbers read:
Source: Technology.org May 20, 2026 · Interesting Engineering May 2026
The human won. By 192 packages. After 10 hours. Aimé said his arms felt like they were going to break. The robot said nothing, walked to the charger, and let the next robot take over.
That's the moment people screenshot and sent to their group chats. Not because the robot won — it didn't — but because it lost by 1.5% after working at human pace, and then autonomously rotated out when its battery ran low. No manager needed. No break room. Just: battery low, handoff initiated, back in 30 minutes.
The split-screen that went everywhere. Human: 12,924. Robot: 12,732. "My arms felt like they were going to break," said the human. The robot had no comment. (© Figure AI)
Why does autonomous battery swap matter? In a real warehouse, if a robot needs a human to swap its battery, you've just introduced a dependency that limits deployment scale. The moment Figure 03 walks itself to the charger and lets another robot take over — unsupervised — the operation becomes genuinely self-sustaining. That's the actual milestone. Not the package count.
What's Under the Hood: Figure 03 Specs
Sources: Figure AI press release April 2026 · Robotics & Automation News May 27, 2026 · Techiexpert.com May 27, 2026
The "local AI only" line matters more than it looks. Helix-02 runs entirely on the robot's onboard hardware — no cloud dependency, no latency from a remote server, no failure mode from an internet outage. The robot sees, decides, and acts on its own. That's what makes 200-hour autonomous operation possible without a human babysitter in the loop.
From Livestream to Signed Contract: The Catalyst Brands Deal
On May 26, 2026 — four days after the 200-hour test ended — Figure AI announced a commercial partnership with Catalyst Brands, parent company of JCPenney, Aeropostale, and Brooks Brothers.
Figure 03 robots will work inside Catalyst's Joey Pouch induction sorting system — a computerized sorting and packing operation that underwent a $40 million infrastructure upgrade in 2024. The robots take on the repetitive physical sorting work, freeing human staff for higher-skill tasks.
Before the contract was signed, Figure ran a 72-hour autonomous sorting test. In that window, the robots processed 88,000 packages and operated continuously for over 24 hours without interruption. The Catalyst deal was signed after that result. Data before paper.
Factory floors are structured. Retail logistics isn't. Package shapes, sizes, and weights change constantly. The Joey Pouch system handles products from JCPenney, Aeropostale, and Brooks Brothers simultaneously — clothing, accessories, and soft goods in all kinds of packaging. If Figure 03 can handle that reliably, it can handle almost any warehouse.
Sources: JCPenney Newsroom official release May 26, 2026 · Crypto Briefing May 26, 2026 · Retail Technology Innovation Hub May 27, 2026
The Full 200-Hour Story, Day by Day
So What Does This Actually Mean for Your Job?
Here's the uncomfortable truth. The human intern won. But he's not going back to work 200 hours straight next week. Figure 03 will.
The math isn't really about who sorted more packages in 10 hours. It's about what happens when you multiply one robot by a hundred, then run them across three shifts, seven days a week, without overtime. The economics of logistics are about to look very different for companies operating at Catalyst's scale.
That said — the robot isn't flawless. Misaligned packages caused occasional errors. Slippery wrapping still trips things up. Figure 03 is not yet better than a good human worker on a hard day. But it's good enough for a real commercial deployment. And it just proved it, live, in front of 10 million people.
The comment that stuck: "My arms felt like they were going to break." The robot walked to the charger and sent in a replacement. No workers' comp required.
The Demo Era Is Over. Welcome to the Shift.
Three weeks ago, Figure 03 was a promising robot in a well-funded startup. Today, it has a contract with a major American retailer, 200 hours of continuous autonomous operation on record, and its own internet fan base.
The question was never whether humanoid robots could sort packages. The question was whether they could do it for long enough, reliably enough, to be worth putting in a real warehouse. Figure 03 just answered that. In public. On YouTube.
"The human won the 10-hour race. The robot won the 200-hour argument."
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