Figure 02 at Spartanburg occupies a verification position structurally distinct from the other foundational humanoid signals. Tesla's We Robot demonstrations were teleoperated and framed as autonomous. 1X disclosed teleoperation as strategy on the path to consumer rollout. Agility shipped 100,000-tote throughput at GXO Flowery Branch as the first scaled-operations data point. Apptronik locked in Fortune-500 breadth ahead of throughput verification. Boston Dynamics' electric Atlas committed to closing the engineering-credibility-versus-commercial-verification gap. Figure has produced 30,000 finished automobiles, fit for sale under BMW's normal quality control processes, using humanoid robots performing live chassis assembly. The verification standard is end-product automotive OEM acceptance: not cycles completed in isolation but cars built and accepted by a downstream customer for delivery to retail.
That standard is structurally higher than logistics cycle-counting. A tote moved is a tote moved; an automobile delivered to a dealer carries BMW's brand warranty and the entire engineering chain of acceptance behind it. The implication for operators evaluating humanoid commercial readiness is that the verification bar for "deployed in production" should be end-product OEM acceptance, not robot-cycle metrics alone. An 11-month deployment spans seasonal product mix, line-rate variation, and engineering change orders; BMW's procurement and operations functions accepted Figure 02 as a workable production-line input across that full operating envelope. The next operator question is whether the BMW Group expansion to Plant Leipzig sustains the same OEM-acceptance throughput with Figure 03 (the deployed generation as of late 2025 / early 2026), and whether subsequent automotive-OEM customers replicate BMW's pattern or whether Spartanburg remains a singular reference deployment for the rest of the cycle.