By AIM · AIM Media House
Skild AI, the Pittsburgh-founded robotics software startup valued at over $14 billion after a $1.4 billion Series C earlier in 2026, has acquired the robotics automation business of Zebra Technologies — the unit formerly known as Fetch Robotics. Financial terms were not disclosed.
The deal marks one of the most consequential consolidations in embodied AI to date, and a clean exit for a robotics asset that has changed hands under very different strategic premises.
The announcement, first reported by Bloomberg on April 15, 2026, hands Skild two things it did not have before: a production-deployed fleet of autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) working in real warehouses, and Zebra's Symmetry Fulfillment orchestration platform — the software layer that coordinates those robots alongside human workers using real-time data from Zebra's wearable devices.
For Skild, this is the missing piece of a very deliberate stack. For Zebra, it is a clean cut from a business it has publicly said it wanted to exit.
And for the broader enterprise AI community tracking the agentic wave , it is the clearest signal yet that foundation models are moving off the screen and onto the warehouse floor.
What Skild is actually building Skild's pitch is what the company calls an "omni-bodied brain" — a single foundation model designed to control robots regardless of form factor.
Quadrupeds, humanoids, tabletop arms, mobile manipulators: the same underlying model generalises across all of them without retraining from scratch. This is a meaningful departure from how robotics has historically worked.
Classical deployments are brittle and task-specific — programmed against the exact kinematics of one robot.
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