The rules we work by

Specs with receipts

Robot shopping in 2026 is a mess. The first page of Google will quote you three different prices for the same humanoid, none of them checked against the manufacturer. AI-written product blogs invent numbers. Marketing pages round up. We started BigBot Store because we wanted the boring thing nobody was doing: a spec sheet you can trust.

The promise

  • Every number has a source. Specs and prices link to the exact page they were verified against — manufacturer first, authorized US resellers second.
  • Every page has a date. "Verified 2026-07-05" means a person or a checked pipeline confirmed it that day. Prices change; our dates tell you how stale we might be.
  • n/d beats a guess. When a manufacturer doesn't publish a max speed, our table says n/d. We'd rather admit a gap than fill it with a plausible lie.
  • Corrections are public. Data pages carry changelogs. When a price moves or we got something wrong, the change is recorded, not silently patched.
  • Affiliate links never touch the data. Some outbound links earn us a commission (details). Whether a link pays us has zero effect on prices, rankings, or verdicts — and most of our links pay us nothing.

What we don't do

We don't publish specs from memory, other blogs, or AI summaries. We don't rank robots by commission. We don't pretend to have tested machines we haven't touched — hands-on notes will be clearly marked as such when our test units arrive.

Found an error? That's a gift: tell us and we'll fix it, credit the correction in the changelog, and check the neighboring data twice.