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News · 5/18/2026

GOKO M6 brings industrial-robotics specs to the premium robotic mower race

GOKO, the consumer robotics brand from Robot++, has introduced the M6, a 4WD AI robotic lawn mower aimed at the part of the yard-care market where many consumer mower robots still struggle: steep slop

GOKO M6 4WD AI robotic lawn mower

GOKO, the consumer robotics brand from Robot++, has introduced the M6, a 4WD AI robotic lawn mower aimed at the part of the yard-care market where many consumer mower robots still struggle: steep slopes, rough ground, overgrown grass and large, complex properties.

The May 10 announcement frames M6 as GOKO's flagship product and Robot++'s entry into smart outdoor consumer robotics. The commercial caveat is important: GOKO says the M6 will make its global debut on Kickstarter in mid-May 2026, with global shipping beginning after campaign completion. Buyers should treat it as a launch-stage product, not a mature installed fleet.

The spec sheet is still worth tracking. GOKO lists 4WD with adaptive suspension, front-wheel steering, zero-radius maneuvering, wire-free CyberNav Fusion navigation using VSLAM, RTK, IMU and odometry, NRTK support, mapping across unlimited zones, and up to 15 acres of mapped area. For mowing work, it lists switchable Razor Discs for fine finishing, Rotary Mulching Blades for thicker growth, a 16.5-inch cutting path, and 25-100 mm adjustable cutting height.

The headline terrain claim is aggressive: GOKO says M6 can climb 42-degree slopes, equivalent to a 90% grade. It also claims AI QuadVision obstacle avoidance with four cameras and recognition of more than 200 object types, plus up to 360 minutes of runtime and up to 2 acres of mowing per day.

That puts M6 in the premium mower conversation rather than the basic robot-vacuum-for-grass category. The relevant comparison set includes Mammotion Luba-style all-wheel-drive mowers, Segway Navimow, Husqvarna Automower, Ecovacs GOAT, Yarbo and other wire-free outdoor robots that are trying to move beyond small, flat lawns.

The buyer question is not just whether M6 has impressive launch specs. It is whether those specs survive wet grass, mixed lighting, tree cover, RTK dropouts, uneven slopes, dog toys, garden edges, children, pets and the daily mess of suburban yards. Obstacle recognition and wire-free mapping are useful only if the robot can recover gracefully when the environment changes.

GOKO's Robot++ connection is the strategic reason to watch it. Robot++ has positioned itself around industrial autonomous robotics, and GOKO says the M6 translates more than a decade of industrial robotics experience into residential lawn care. If that know-how shows up as durable mechanics, reliable navigation and repairable hardware, M6 could be more than another crowdfunding mower.

RoboHub now lists GOKO M6 as a home outdoor robot. Procurement and early adopters should ask for independent slope tests, rain and wet-grass policy, boundary failure behavior, replacement blade and battery cost, service region, warranty, RTK/NRTK requirements, theft recovery, app data handling, and what happens if the Kickstarter schedule slips.

The broader signal is that outdoor consumer robotics is fragmenting into tiers. Low-cost mowers still target simple lawns. Premium platforms are moving toward rugged terrain, wire-free setup, multi-zone mapping, computer vision and longer runtime. GOKO M6 is trying to enter that second tier from day one.

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