Most home robots today have one thing in common: they’re loud, rigid, and unmistakably robotic. Whether it’s a vacuum cleaner bumping into furniture or a drone buzzing overhead, they’re built to perform tasks – not necessarily to make people feel comfortable. Researchers in Japan think there’s a better way, and it starts with taking inspiration from animated creatures rather than industrial machines.
A research team led by Mingyang Xu at Keio University, in collaboration with institutions including the MIT Media Lab, has unveiled a prototype floating companion robot that glides silently through the air instead of rolling across the floor. Rather than looking like another gadget, the robot resembles a tiny floating creature, drawing inspiration from characters such as Tinker Bell, Pokémon’s Mew, and Studio Ghibli’s Soot Sprites.
The team recently demonstrated the concept in a video showcasing how these lighter-than-air robots could one day become part of everyday life.
A softer approach to robots that live alongside humans
Unlike conventional drones, the prototype doesn’t rely on fast-spinning propellers that produce constant noise. Instead, it uses a lighter-than-air design with small fins that gently propel it through the air, giving it the appearance of a floating white whale drifting from room to room.
The design isn’t simply about aesthetics. Because the robot is lightweight, soft-bodied, and lacks exposed moving parts or pinch points, it can safely interact with people without posing the same risks as traditional flying robots. That opens up possibilities for robots that don’t need to stay behind safety barriers or operate only when humans aren’t nearby.
In the demonstration, the floating companion performs surprisingly ordinary tasks. It wakes users up like an alarm clock, delivers reminders, keeps someone company while studying, dances alongside its owner, and even serves as a playful source of entertainment. Rather than replacing smartphones or smart speakers, the robot acts more like a friendly presence that naturally shares the same physical space as its owner.
Why making robots feel approachable matters
The project also tackles one of robotics’ oldest design problems: the uncanny valley. Researchers have long found that robots designed to look almost human often make people uncomfortable because their appearance falls somewhere between familiar and artificial, leading to instances involving the uncanny valley – an effect where someone feels something looks almost human, but not quite there.
Instead of trying to build realistic facial expressions, the research team believes emotion can be communicated through movement itself. Gentle floating motions, soft body language, and playful interactions may prove more effective than synthetic smiles or blinking digital eyes.
That philosophy could become increasingly important as AI companions become more common. Companies such as OpenAI, Meta, and Apple are investing heavily in AI assistants that are expected to move beyond smartphones and into dedicated hardware. At the same time, robotics companies are racing to build home companions that people actually enjoy living with – not just machines that complete chores.
This floating robot isn’t close to becoming a commercial product yet, but it offers an intriguing glimpse of what the next generation of AI companions might look like. If researchers are right, the most successful home robot of the future may not resemble a humanoid assistant at all. It might simply drift quietly into the room like something straight out of an animated fantasy film.


