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Xingji Guangnian Secures 100 Million Yuan Funding and Launches 20‑DOF Gaia Hand 20

Xingji Guangnian raises over 100 million yuan in two rounds and releases the 20‑DOF Gaia Hand 20 with tiered tactile feedback and quick‑change joints.

Alex Mercer/3 min/US

Senior Tech Correspondent

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Xingji Guangnian Secures 100 Million Yuan Funding and Launches 20‑DOF Gaia Hand 20
Source: AutonewsOriginal source

TL;DR Xingji Guangnian raised over 100 million yuan in two funding rounds within three months and unveiled the Gaia Hand 20, a 20‑DOF dexterous hand with tiered tactile feedback and sub‑five‑minute joint swaps.

Context Founded in August 2024, Xingji Guangnian focuses on embodied intelligence and general manipulation. The company builds a full‑stack platform that spans joint modules, dexterous hand products, data collection systems, and intelligence models. Its product portfolio includes the cable‑driven Pantheon series and the direct‑drive Gaia series, both aimed at industrial end‑effector applications.

Key Facts The startup closed two funding rounds in under three months, totaling more than 100 million yuan. The Gaia Hand 20 delivers 20 degrees of freedom and features an industry‑first tiered tactile feedback system. Its joint‑level quick‑change design allows individual modules to be swapped in less than five minutes, reducing downtime during high‑frequency tasks.

What It Means The fresh capital will accelerate deployment of the general dexterous manipulation platform in factories, refine product designs, upgrade production lines, and expand the team globally. By offering a hand with high DOF, adaptable touch sensing, and fast modularity, Xingji Guangnian targets sectors such as 3C precision manufacturing and high‑risk specialized operations where flexibility and reliability are critical. Universities and research labs already use the hardware for embodied intelligence studies, suggesting a growing ecosystem around the technology.

Watch for the company’s first large‑scale rollout in 3C assembly lines later this year and any announcements of next‑generation hand variants that build on the Gaia architecture.

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