Gamma 2 Robotics
CPS 9Develops autonomous security robots for physical security applications in warehouses and data centers.
Gamma 2 Robotics exhibits all hallmarks of a failed or dormant venture: no funding since 2017, zero documented customer deployments despite 23 years of operation, only $3.97M total raised in a capital-intensive hardware business, and complete absence from industry discourse since 2017. The company has been decisively surpassed by better-funded competitors like Knightscope and Cobalt Robotics (acquired by Securitas), making any turnaround scenario extremely improbable.
Early mover in autonomous security robotics with founding in 2003, potentially holding legacy IP or institutional knowledge in the space
RAMSEE robot featured a comprehensive sensor suite (LIDAR, FLIR, 3D depth cameras, sonar) and multi-hazard detection capabilities (fire, smoke, gas, water, temperature)
The autonomous security robotics market has grown substantially, validating the original thesis — Cobalt Robotics' acquisition by Securitas in 2021 confirmed market demand
Claimed 75% cost savings versus human security guards aligns with persistent industry demand for labor cost reduction in physical security
Strategic investor Foxlink Group (Taiwan electronics manufacturer) participated in Series A, suggesting some manufacturing partnership potential existed
No funding raised since May 2017 — a nine-year gap in a capital-intensive hardware robotics business is effectively fatal
Zero documented customer deployments or case studies despite claiming 'Full Product Ready' status in 2017, indicating fundamental commercial failure
Total funding of only $3.97M is grossly insufficient for hardware robotics; competitor Knightscope raised 25x+ this amount
Complete absence from industry news, trade shows, social media, and patent filings since 2017 strongly indicates dormancy or shutdown
Failed $6M capital raise via Boustead Securities in 2017 appears to have been the company's last viable lifeline
Technology differentiation ('Cybernetic Brain') has been commoditized by advances in ROS, affordable LIDAR, and cloud AI services
Company is likely dormant or defunct — no verifiable operational activity since 2017
Technology stack developed primarily 2003-2017 is almost certainly obsolete relative to current autonomous robotics standards
No documented revenue, customers, or unit deployments after 23 years of operation
Competitive landscape has matured dramatically with well-funded, publicly traded, or acquired competitors occupying the market
Any IP assets may have lapsed or been abandoned given prolonged inactivity
Remaining $3.97M in historical funding was almost certainly exhausted years ago with no path to new capital
Potential fire sale of IP assets or patents to an acquirer in the security robotics space, though no evidence this is being pursued
Theoretical reactivation if a strategic buyer or new investor saw value in dormant IP, though probability is extremely low
Growing demand for autonomous security in data centers and warehouses could theoretically attract interest in the company's domain expertise