Author: Zen, PANews
Over the past few years, discussions around humanoid robots and embodied intelligence have shifted focus toward whether robots can create actual value. From factory handling, warehouse sorting to collaborative service scenarios, robots are increasingly entering real-world environments.
Compared to locomotion capabilities themselves, the industry is more concerned with when robots can be deployed at scale and consistently handle jobs in the real world. And if robots truly start undertaking real-world labor, will they also need their own payment and settlement capabilities? After German robotics company NEURA Robotics completed its latest funding round, this question has been pushed to the forefront again.
On June 10th, NEURA Robotics announced the completion of a Series C funding round of up to $14 billion, with Tether participating as a major investor. Other investors include Qualcomm Technologies, Amazon, NVIDIA, Bosch, Schaeffler, the European Investment Bank, and others.
Just looking at this financing, touted as the "largest in the history" of the full-stack robotics industry, is enough to make NEURA one of the most watched robotics companies in Europe and globally. However, a point easily overlooked in this round of funding, yet actually worth noting, is that Tether is also attempting to embed self-custody wallets, stablecoin payments, and edge AI into robot systems.
The "Largest" Funding Round in German Corporate History
NEURA Robotics was founded in 2019 and is headquartered in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Looking at its development path, the company did not initially enter the market with humanoid robots, but rather gradually expanded along the industrial automation route most familiar to European manufacturing, then continuously layered AI capabilities onto the robot system.
According to reports by the German business media Handelsblatt, NEURA completed the largest funding round for a German company to date, bringing its valuation to $7 billion. For comparison, Unitree's IPO valuation was around 42 billion RMB, making their current valuations roughly equivalent.
When founding NEURA, founder David Reger believed that although traditional industrial robots were already widely used in manufacturing, they were essentially "blind" machines. They could repeat preset actions but lacked the ability to understand their environment and safely collaborate with humans. Therefore, NEURA did not directly chase the humanoid robot concept early on but first launched collaborative robot (Cobot) products, hoping to give robots the ability to perceive their surroundings and autonomously respond to changes through vision, sensor fusion, and AI software.
Around 2021, the company launched the MAiRA (Multi-Sensing Intelligent Robotic Assistant) collaborative robot product line, representing the first systematic implementation of its "Cognitive Robotics" philosophy.
Compared to traditional collaborative robots, MAiRA integrates vision systems, force feedback, safety perception, and AI software into the robot body, enabling it to recognize personnel, objects, and the work environment, and work alongside humans without complex fencing or isolation. For European manufacturing customers, this solution is easier to implement than fully replacing human labor and aligns better with the practical needs of industrial automation upgrades.
Building the Network Underlying Platform for Silicon-Based Lifeforms
After establishing its collaborative robot portfolio, NEURA began expanding into broader robot forms. The company successively launched Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMR), service robots, and mobile manipulator robots, aiming to extend cognitive capabilities from fixed workstations to warehousing/logistics, medical/nursing, and service scenarios. At this stage, NEURA's strategic focus shifted from single robot products to robot ecosystem building.
As generative AI and embodied intelligence gained more attention, humanoid robots also gradually became a significant part of its product roadmap. NEURA launched the humanoid robot project 4NE-1 (pronounced "for anyone") in 2022, hoping to enter broader scenarios like manufacturing, logistics, services, and homes with a general-purpose robot form. Last year, the third-generation 4NE-1 product debuted at the 2025 German automation exhibition; at this year's Consumer Electronics Show (CES), NEURA introduced the 4NE1 Mini and a quadruped robot.
NEURA believes that the key to future competition is not just mechanical structure, but who can accumulate more real-world data and enable different robots to share learning outcomes. This thinking ultimately evolved into the Neuraverse platform, and NEURA shifted its strategy from robot manufacturer to robot platform operator.
According to NEURA's vision, Neuraverse allows different robots, sensors, AI models, developers, and enterprise clients to connect to the same ecosystem. This enables experience gained by robots in different scenarios to be continuously accumulated and reused, forming network effects similar to the mobile internet app ecosystem. NEURA subsequently began using the term "Physical AI" more frequently to describe its technological direction, though its core narrative still revolves around robots perceiving, understanding, and autonomously deciding in their environment, learning tasks, and continuously evolving.
Tether's Ambition: Robots Could Become a New Foothold for the Crypto Industry
Prior to this funding round, NEURA's story belonged solely to the robotics and AI industry. But with Tether's entry, NEURA gained an angle unique to the crypto industry, also completing the settlement layer for its network.
According to Tether, NEURA's robot platform is expected to integrate Tether's open-source Wallet Development Kit (WDK), embedding self-custody wallet functionality into the robot system. The idea is not to allow robots complete autonomous control over funds, but to enable robot systems to handle receiving, paying, and settling within preset rules.
In practical scenarios, such a design could apply to industrial and logistics fields. For example, after a warehouse robot completes a handling task, the system could automatically trigger settlement; a service robot could receive payment based on task volume, duration, or distance after completing cleaning, delivery, or inspection tasks; robots from different companies, charging equipment, warehousing systems, and dispatch systems might also settle small amounts through programmable payment rails.
This capability has particular imaginative potential under the Robot-as-a-Service (RaaS) model. Companies might not necessarily purchase the robot itself but pay based on usage. If every task, every hour worked, every device call can be automatically logged and settled, robots become not just production tools creating value, but also a settlement node within a company's automated financial system.
This is precisely the part Tether finds compelling and why the crypto industry should pay attention. In the past, stablecoins primarily served exchange transfers, on-chain transactions, cross-border payments, and dollar liquidity needs. However, if a large number of machines begin entering real-world production processes in the future, crypto payments, on-chain settlement, and self-custody wallets gain a new narrative interface, potentially extending stablecoins and self-custody wallets from "human financial tools" to "machine payment infrastructure."
Furthermore, the collaboration between the two parties is not limited to the WDK wallet tool; it also includes testing, optimizing, and deploying Tether's QVAC (QuantumVerse Automatic Computer) edge-first AI runtime framework within the Neuraverse ecosystem.
For robots, local execution means lower latency, stronger operational resilience, and reduced dependence on a few major cloud computing service providers. In industrial scenarios, equipment downtime costs, execution precision, and data control capabilities are all critical, making such an edge computing architecture beneficial for improving system reliability. According to Tether's vision, true autonomy requires instant response, and QVAC's goal is precisely to keep intelligence at the terminal side, enabling local execution in scenarios where millisecond-level decision-making is crucial.
From this perspective, Tether is attempting to enter two foundational layers of the robotics era: first, the financial layer, enabling machines to use wallets and stablecoins for settlement; second, the intelligence layer, allowing machines to run AI capabilities at the edge, rather than relying entirely on remote cloud.
This aligns with Tether's trend in recent years of continuously expanding its boundaries. It is no longer just a USDT issuer but is extending its reach toward AI, energy, data, and other infrastructure directions. And NEURA's financing provides Tether with a testing ground to place stablecoins, self-custody wallets, and edge AI into real-world machine networks.









