MBody AI Expands Robot Fleet Platform to 11 States and Canada

MBody AI's hardware-agnostic Orchestrator platform for service robot fleets now operates in eleven US states and has entered Canada with an Ontario pilot, as the company's merger with Nasdaq-listed Check-Cap advances.

MBody AI Expands Robot Fleet Platform to 11 States and Canada

MBody AI Corp., the Las Vegas company building an operating system for enterprise service robots, has expanded its North American footprint to eleven US states and entered Canada with a pilot in Ontario, according to Check-Cap Ltd., the Nasdaq-listed firm planning to merge with it.

Orchestrator as a command layer for robot fleets

Founded in 2024, MBody AI develops Orchestrator, a proprietary, hardware-agnostic platform that coordinates multi-robot deployments across diverse environments. The system acts as a command layer, letting customers remotely monitor fleets, assign tasks, and turn telemetry into operational decisions, with capabilities spanning deployment optimization, predictive maintenance, and full-fleet coordination.

"Reaching eleven states and entering Canada shows how the Orchestrator platform scales across new markets," said CEO John Fowler. "The value of Orchestrator compounds with each deployment. As the fleet grows, we generate and assess more data each day."

A growing service robotics market

The expansion lands in a North American service robotics market estimated at about $16 billion in 2026 and projected to reach $29 billion by 2031, according to Mordor Intelligence. In March, MBody AI expanded an autonomous floor-care deployment across a Fortune 500 gaming and hospitality operator's US properties, which Fowler described as the company's "flywheel in action."

Service robot coordinated by MBody AI Orchestrator operating in a hotel lobby

Check-Cap merger on track

Check-Cap, a clinical-stage medical diagnostics company based in Isfiya, Israel, is transforming itself into an embodied AI company through the merger. Shareholders of both companies have approved the transaction, and Nasdaq completed its initial review of the listing application in April. Upon closing, the combined company expects to be a publicly traded provider of AI orchestration for robots across hospitality, gaming, commercial real estate, healthcare, and data center operations.

The reverse-merger route follows a broader wave of robotics companies heading to public markets, from Agility Robotics' $2.5 billion Churchill SPAC deal to SEER Robotics' Hong Kong 'robot brain' IPO. It also underscores rising demand for fleet-level software as operators consolidate, as seen in Bear Robotics' acquisition of Kinisi Robotics.

Reporting based on coverage from The Robot Report.

Category: Robotics

Tags: Automation AI Automation Enterprise AI Service Robots

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