tAGILITY
Tokenized Economic Right (not equity) to potential future liquidity from WLTH’s (Metamasters DAO Corp) allocation in Agility Robotics, a leading developer of industrial humanoid robots.
Slices are not securities of, nor endorsed by, the underlying company. They are unsecured contractual rights against WLTH (Metamasters DAO Corp). Residents of the U.S., UK, EU, and other restricted jurisdictions are ineligible. Review the full Terms & Conditions before purchasing.
Category: Robotics
Opportunity Type: Tokenized Economic Right
Reference Valuation: TBA
Company Overview
Founded in 2015 as a spin-out from Oregon State University’s Dynamic Robotics Lab by co-founders Jonathan Hurst, Damion Shelton and Mikhail Jones, Agility Robotics develops humanoid robots intended for real-world industrial and logistics environments. Its flagship product, Digit, is designed to navigate human-designed spaces, manipulate objects (e.g., tote bins) and perform repetitive physical tasks in warehousing and logistics workflows. The company also offers a software-platform, Agility Arc, which manages fleet orchestration, task scheduling and integration into facility automation systems.
Key pillars of Agility Robotics’ business include:
Development and commercialization of the Digit humanoid robot platform for industrial/logistics tasks (e.g., warehousing, material handling)
A cloud-software stack (Agility Arc) enabling fleet management, workflow orchestration and integration with existing automation ecosystems
A dual business model combining capital-sale of hardware with Robots-as-a-Service (RaaS) or subscription models for recurring revenue
Strategic manufacturing scale-up (including a purpose-built facility) to deliver industrial-grade production capacity
The Problem
Logistics, warehousing and manufacturing operations are facing acute labour shortages and turnover, especially in repetitive physical jobs, creating structural cost and operational pressures.
Traditional automation (e.g., fixed-arm robots, conveyors) is often designed for structured environments and lacks the flexibility to safely and efficiently operate in human-centric, dynamic workspaces.
Enterprises need automation solutions that can integrate into existing human-built facilities, share space with workers, adapt across workflows, and provide predictable return on investment.
Many existing robotics providers focus on research or constrained environments; there is a gap for robots that are robust, commercially deployable and effectively mask the human labour shortage in dynamic physical settings.
The Solution
Digit is engineered to traverse human-scale infrastructure (aisles, ramps, docks), manipulate goods (e.g., plastic totes), and operate in logistics settings where wheeled robots struggle.
Agility Arc provides cloud-based fleet management, controls, monitoring and integration with other systems like autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) or conveyor systems, enabling enterprises to treat humanoid robots as an operational asset.
The company offers both hardware sales and RaaS models, reducing upfront cost and aligning incentives around uptime, service and scalability.
Market Opportunity
The logistics and warehouse automation market is under increasing stress from labour scarcity, e-commerce growth, supply-chain complexity and demand for agility.
Personal-mobility robotics (humanoid robots) represent an expanding sub-segment because they can operate across diverse human environments, potentially unlocking a broader addressable market than fixed robotic systems.
As robotics hardware, AI, sensors and fleet software converge, the lifetime value and service opportunities increase (software, updates, fleets, analytics) which makes recurring revenue models more viable.
Agility’s early commercial deployments and manufacturing readiness position it to capture a significant share of this emergent “mobile manipulation” robotics market.
Traction & Validation
Early commercial deployments: the company reports shipping early versions of Digit starting around 2018-2020, including a partnership with Ford Motor Company to explore delivery/logistics use-cases.
The company states over 100 Digit units have been deployed or are in pilot phases in real-world logistics settings (e.g., with GXO Logistics) as of 2025.
Manufacturing scale-up: The purpose-built factory (RoboFab) in Salem, Oregon commenced output in 2023 and is designed to scale to thousands of units annually.
Intellectual Property & Strategic Assets
Proprietary control systems and locomotion algorithms (from Jonathan Hurst’s research) enable Digit’s bipedal mobility and manipulation capabilities in human-designed environments.
Integration of hardware, sensors, software (Digit + Arc) creates a full stack that is more defensible than standalone robot hardware.
Manufacturing facility and vertical integration (RoboFab) provide supply chain, scale and cost advantages.
Partnerships with large industrial customers (e.g., Amazon, GXO) provide proof-points, data, service/training infrastructure and competitive references.
Business Model & Financial Highlights
CapEx model: sale of hardware (Digit robots) and subscription for software (Arc) + services.
RaaS model: recurring fee covering robot hardware, work cell, software updates and maintenance, aligning incentives around uptime and performance.
Financial publicly disclosed: As of April 2025 estimated revenue ~$35.5 million with valuation ~$1.8 billion.
Latest funding rounds: $400 million raise in 2025, placing the company’s valuation in the ~$2.12 billion range.
Competitor Analysis
Company
Focus
Stage
Revenue
Valuation
Agility Robotics
Humanoid robots for logistics and industrial automation
Private
Approx. USD 35.5 million annualised (2025 estimate)
Approx. USD 2.12 billion (2025)
Boston Dynamics
Legged robots, mobile manipulation, industrial and research robotics
Subsidiary of Hyundai
Not publicly disclosed
Integrated within Hyundai, standalone valuation not available
Apptronik
Industrial humanoid and modular robotics systems
Private
Not publicly disclosed
Not publicly disclosed
Figure AI
General-purpose humanoid robots for enterprise and consumer markets
Private
Not publicly disclosed
Approx. USD 39 billion (2025)
*Figures approximate based on latest publicly available data.
Team
Peggy Johnson: Appointed CEO of Agility Robotics in March 2024, previously CEO of Magic Leap and Executive Vice President at Microsoft.
Jonathan Hurst: Co-founder and Chief Robot Officer, leading legged locomotion research and robot control design.
Disclaimer
No affiliation — nominative reference only.
The underlying company is entirely unaffiliated with this offering, with Metamasters DAO Corp, and with the associated Slices. Specifically:
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No effect on the underlying company’s securities. Issuing Slices does not affect its capitalisation, shareholder base, voting power, or governance.
Trademark usage. Any mention of the underlying company’s name is strictly nominative. WLTH claims no ownership and implies no sponsorship.
Information limitations. All company-related data herein are drawn from public sources WLTH believes to be reliable.
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