Autonomy has escaped the lab. Robots are now expected to work on construction sites, in mines, across flooded terrain and up icy staircases — places where a delicate chassis simply won’t survive. That shift is exactly what the DEEP Robotics LYNX M20 Pro was designed for, and its spec sheet reads like a challenge to anything the outdoors can throw at it.
Start with the armour. The LYNX M20 Pro carries an IP66-rated body and keeps working in temperatures from –20 °C to +55 °C, meaning dust storms, rain and hard frost are all fair game. Ruggedization here isn’t a marketing garnish — it’s the whole point. As robots move beyond climate-controlled warehouses, weatherproofing stops being a premium feature and becomes a prerequisite for showing up to work at all.
Underneath that shell sits a genuinely capable quadruped. The machine weighs 33 kg including its battery, yet handles an effective payload of 15 kg and a maximum payload of 50 kg — impressive leverage for something you could theoretically carry yourself. It hits a maximum tested speed of 5 m/s, with a more sensible maximum operating speed of 2 m/s for real deployments.
Terrain is where legged robots earn their keep, and the LYNX M20 Pro leans into that. It climbs slopes up to 45°, tackles continuous stairs up to 25 cm per step, and can clear a single step as tall as 80 cm. Navigation is handled by twin 96-line LiDAR, and bi-directional lighting keeps it working when the sun goes down.
Endurance is respectable for a robot this athletic. Unloaded, it runs for 3 h and covers 15 km; carrying a load, that drops to 2.5 h and 12 km. When the batteries do run flat, hot-swappable packs mean a fresh cell gets it back on its feet without a lengthy sit-down.
The M20 platform was officially unveiled in Hangzhou, China, with global pre-orders opening after the reveal, and it was showcased at CES 2026 in January. Pre-orders remain active, and the LYNX M20 Pro is listed at US$61,200.00.
That figure places it squarely in the professional and industrial bracket rather than the hobbyist shelf — but for operators sending machines into environments that would eat a lesser robot alive, the ruggedized case for the LYNX M20 Pro makes itself.