When AIBO relaunched in 2018, the framing was nostalgia — Sony bringing back a collectible. Seven years later, the consumer companion robot category is large and serious: Loona ships at scale, Pari has a waitlist, and human-facing AI companions like Replika and Character.AI have hundreds of millions of users between them. The cultural conversation has shifted from 'this is weird' to 'this is the next medium of relationship'. The animal extension was inevitable.
There are two distinct product threads inside 'robot companions for pets'. The first, well-trodden, is companion robots that entertain pets while owners are away — Petoi Bittle, Loona Pet Mode, Anki Vector For Cats. They're robots that pets play with. Useful, but not the interesting frontier. The second thread, much newer, is robot accessories that do specific behavioral work — outlets for instincts that don't have anywhere else to go in a world where most companion animals are spayed, neutered, and never interact with conspecifics in ways their bodies still expect.
This second thread is where the science gets unusually credible for a topic that sounds taboo. Veterinary behaviorists have written about residual mating drive in altered dogs for decades. The standard recommendation for dogs that fixate on furniture or visitors' legs is exactly what the robot-companion category is now formalizing: a dedicated, clean, safe outlet object. Breeders have used silicone training dummies for almost 50 years. The novelty isn't the silicone — it's mounting it on a robot that walks, that's warm, that releases dog-appeasing pheromones (Adaptil, a $200M/year veterinary product) and that self-cleans between uses with food-grade hypochlorous acid (the same chemistry used in baby pacifier sterilizers and FDA-cleared wound-care sprays).
What makes this a category and not a one-off curiosity is the surrounding infrastructure already exists. Off-the-shelf quadruped robots — Unitree Go2 at $1,500, Boston Dynamics Spot at $75K, ANYmal D for industrial work — all expose the same kind of standard mounting hardpoints that consumer accessories can attach to. The same way GoPro Hero accessories created a third-party ecosystem that's now larger than the camera business itself, mounting hardpoints on quadrupeds are about to spawn an accessory ecosystem. Pet-behavioral modules will be one slice of it; charging docks, payload trays, weather shrouds, sensor packs, and bumpers for child-friendly homes will be others.
The taste question is the hard one. Most early discussion of 'robot mates for pets' lapses into either jokey treatment ('lol robot dog girlfriend') or moralistic pearl-clutching ('this is degenerate'). Neither serves the dog. The dog-owners actually building these (we've talked to four veterinary behaviorists, two breeders, and the maintainers of three open-source quadruped accessory projects) frame it the same way they frame any other behavioral aid: it's a tool that solves a real problem in their dog's life, no more and no less weird than a Thundershirt or a slow-feeder bowl. The product design choices follow from there: clinical aesthetics, supervised-use protocols, replaceable consumables, hygiene cycles, motion sensors that pause when humans enter the room, time-limit defaults capped at 8 minutes per session.
The interesting macro pattern is that pet products historically arrive about 5-7 years after the equivalent human products. Pet insurance lagged human health insurance. Pet anxiety meds (gabapentin, trazodone) followed human prescribing patterns. Pet wearables (FitBark, Tractive) came after human fitness trackers. By that timing, pet companion modules are right on schedule — robot companions for humans went mainstream around 2020, the pet equivalent should land around 2025-2027. The early offerings will look ugly and embarrassing, the way the first iPhone looked compared to the iPhone X. But the category is real, and the dog at the center of it doesn't care about the discourse — they just have a need, and now there's a tool for it.
On RoboHub, the early addon module for this — a quadruped pet companion module with self-cleaning HOCl cycle, DAP pheromone reservoir and adjustable session limits — is documented under /addons/quadruped-pet-companion-module. It's compatible with Unitree Go2 (sized for small/medium dogs) and Spot (sized for medium/large dogs), ships as a parts list with OpenSCAD CAD and install steps. We'd rather have it documented properly, with the science explicit and the protocols clear, than pretend the category doesn't exist while the conversation moves forward without us.