VinRobotics and VinDynamics, two technology subsidiaries under Vietnamese conglomerate Vingroup, have displayed unveiled their humanoid robots at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA 2026) in Vienna and COMPUTEX Taipei 2026.

In two statement on Monday and Wednesday, Vingroup said VinRobotics showcased the VR-H3, its third-generation humanoid robot, while VinDynamics introduced Dyno, its first humanoid robot.

VinRobotics’s VR-H3 robot focuses on industrial and operational performance. Equipped with more than 31 actuators and two onboard edge computers, the robot can perceive its surroundings, interact with humans, lift payloads of up to 6–8 kilograms, transport objects, and perform assembly operations.

All core technologies — including the mechanical structure, real-time computing and communication electrical/electronic (E/E) architecture, power distribution platform, battery system, and full-body AI control technology — were developed entirely in-house. At ICRA 2026, VR-H3 demonstrated remote operation capabilities enabled by motion-capture technology integrated into a virtual reality headset, requiring no additional external devices.

Dyno operates as a versatile assistant for modern living environments. The robot features an advanced AI platform paired with a highly responsive environmental sensing system, optimized for security and surveillance across urban areas, campuses, and integrated service complexes.

It is also being developed as a household assistant, capable of supporting everyday tasks through a flexible arm span and dexterous object manipulation. A live demonstration at both events featured Dyno operating as a robotic guide, similar to a role it performed at Vinpearl Safari Phu Quoc tourism complex.

Dyno humanoid robot. Source: Vingroup

Shared Technology Foundations

Both companies presented robotics technology ecosystems developed by their respective engineering teams. VinRobotics highlighted an integrated ecosystem spanning humanoid robotic systems, robotic hands, and high-performance actuators. VinDynamics showcased two core components alongside Dyno: a specialized actuator system and a robotic hand with internationally benchmarked dexterity, as well as a dedicated AI training dataset optimized for real-world application scenarios.

Both companies covered the full development stack — hardware, software, mechanical design, and artificial intelligence.

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