Singapore-based Doozy Robotics, a Physical AI humanoid company, has announced a coordinated global expansion across the United States, GCC, and Asia. This milestone marks the next phase of growth for the startup as it prepares for a planned Series A round. Backed by Cocoon Capital, Doozy has already demonstrated strong commercial traction with paying customers across two continents.
Founded by Suresh Chandrasekar and Ajmal Thahseen, the company is building a vertically integrated ecosystem rather than offering standalone machines. Its platform combines an Industrial Super Humanoid, fleets of Autonomous Mobile Robots, and Autonomous Forklifts, all orchestrated by Eywa-OS. Acting as a super-intelligent factory manager, Eywa-OS interprets production goals, allocates humanoids and robots dynamically, and adapts to disruptions in real time. The Industrial Super Humanoid is scheduled to launch in Q3 2026, with deployments beginning shortly thereafter.
The expansion comes amid a global labor shortage that is reshaping industrial economies. In the U.S. alone, labor constraints are projected to cause over $1 trillion in negative GDP impact by 2030. Doozy positions itself as the first scalable agentic industrial workforce designed to address this structural shift, offering autonomous humanoids and robots as a subscription-based service.
Instead of heavy capital expenditure, customers can subscribe to Doozy’s Robot-as-a-Service model, scaling their autonomous workforce up or down as production demands change. This elastic approach transforms factory automation into an operational service, making adoption more accessible and cost-effective.
Doozy’s commercial traction includes a global pipeline exceeding $200 million, a $144 million MOU with a major industrial conglomerate, and a large pilot deployment with a U.S. pharmaceutical leader. Customers such as Daimler, Carrier, and VitaQuest are already live, validating the company’s ability to deliver advanced robotics solutions at scale.
Michael Blakey, Managing Partner at Cocoon Capital, praised the company’s execution, noting its breakthroughs in industrial robotics such as navigating uneven floors and reducing operational footprints by 50% compared to traditional forklifts. He emphasized that Doozy’s pricing strategy makes mass-market adoption inevitable, calling it a leap forward for the industry.
With its expansion and upcoming product launches, Doozy Robotics is positioning itself as a pioneer in Physical AI, building autonomous industrial workforces that can redefine manufacturing and logistics worldwide.






