Hugging Face’s Reachy Mini app store gives its open source desktop robot a one click catalog of apps powered by Hugging Face Spaces; VentureBeat reported about 200 apps at launch, but the real test is whether develope... Reachy Mini starts at $299, is programmable in Python, and is designed for human robot interacti...

Create a landscape editorial hero image for this Studio Global article: Hugging Face’s Reachy Mini App Store, Explained. Article summary: Hugging Face’s Reachy Mini app store is a one click catalog of robot apps powered by Hugging Face Spaces; VentureBeat reported about 200 apps at launch [1][2].. Topic tags: robotics, open source, hugging face, ai, embodied ai. Reference image context from search candidates: Reference image 1: visual subject "# [](https://huggingface.co/blog/reachy-mini#reachy-mini--the-open-source-robot-for-todays-and-tomorrows-ai-builders) Reachy Mini – The Open-Source Robot for Today's and Tomorrow's" source context "Reachy Mini - The Open-Source Robot for Today's and Tomorrow's AI Builders" Reference image 2: visual subject "# [](https://huggingface.co/blog/reachy-mini#reachy-mini--the-open-source-robot-for-todays-and-tomorrows-ai-builders) Reachy Mini – The Open-So
Reachy Mini’s app store is Hugging Face’s attempt to make open-source robotics feel more like modern software: install an app, try a behavior, modify it, and share what works. Hugging Face’s documentation says the store is powered by Hugging Face Spaces and that apps can be installed directly from Reachy Mini Control with one click [1]. VentureBeat reported that the launch included about 200 apps [
2].
At its simplest, the Reachy Mini app store is a distribution layer for robot behavior. Instead of treating every robot interaction as a custom engineering project, developers can start from installable apps built for the same open-source desktop robot [1].
The early examples show the range Hugging Face is aiming for. Its docs list a Conversation App for talking naturally with Reachy Mini using LLMs, a Radio app, and a Hand Tracker app [1]. That mix matters: the store is not only for motion demos. It can also host AI interaction, perception, and lightweight companion-style experiences.
The app store matters because it is attached to a real programmable robot, not only a simulator. Hugging Face describes Reachy Mini as an expressive, open-source robot for human-robot interaction, creative coding, and AI experimentation [12]. The company says it is fully programmable in Python, with JavaScript and Scratch support planned, and priced from $299 .
Studio Global AI
Use this topic as a starting point for a fresh source-backed answer, then compare citations before you share it.
Hugging Face’s Reachy Mini app store gives its open source desktop robot a one click catalog of apps powered by Hugging Face Spaces; VentureBeat reported about 200 apps at launch, but the real test is whether develope...
Hugging Face’s Reachy Mini app store gives its open source desktop robot a one click catalog of apps powered by Hugging Face Spaces; VentureBeat reported about 200 apps at launch, but the real test is whether develope... Reachy Mini starts at $299, is programmable in Python, and is designed for human robot interaction, creative coding, and AI experimentation [12].
Early examples include LLM powered conversation, radio, and hand tracking, showing how the store could span interaction, perception, and playful desktop experiences [1].
Reachy Mini is an open-source, expressive robot made for hackers and AI builders. ... The full autonomous experience. Raspberry Pi CM4 + Battery + WiFi. The developer version. USB connection to your computer. No hardware required. Prototype in MuJoCo. ... �...
There's an app for nearly every imaginable user and use case these days, but one thing they all have in common is that they're centered around one device: the smartphone. That changes today as Hugging Face, the 10-year-old New York City startup best known f...
Better known for its artificial intelligence software solutions, Hugging Face unveiled the Reachy Mini open-source desktop robot last year. It is designed to deploy AI applications that interface with the physical world. The robot features a camera, four mi...
Reachy Mini is an expressive, open-source robot designed for human-robot interaction, creative coding, and AI experimentation. Fully programmable in Python (and soon JavaScript, Scratch) and priced from $299 , it's your gateway into robotics AI: fun, custom...
Hugging Face’s docs describe several ways to work with Reachy Mini: an autonomous version with a Raspberry Pi CM4, battery, and Wi-Fi; a developer version that connects by USB to a computer; and a no-hardware path for prototyping in MuJoCo [1]. CNX Software reported that the robot includes a camera, four microphones, a speaker, a 6-DoF moving head, body rotation, and antenna movement driven by nine servo motors [
3].
That combination gives the app store a practical purpose. Apps can target a small robot that can sense, speak, and move in a room, while developers who do not yet have the hardware can still prototype in simulation [1][
3].
The important shift is not any single demo app. It is the idea that robot capabilities can be distributed through a shared app layer.
For developers, that can reduce the blank-page problem. Hugging Face now connects hardware, simulation, control software, and a Hugging Face Spaces-backed app ecosystem around the same device [1]. A developer can begin with an existing app, learn how it behaves, and build toward a new robot experience rather than assembling every layer from scratch.
For open-source robotics, the value is accessibility. Hugging Face positions Reachy Mini for AI developers, hackers, researchers, teachers, robot enthusiasts, and families experimenting with coding [12]. A store layered on top of an open-source, programmable robot gives that audience a clearer path to reuse and share robot behaviors [
1][
12].
For embodied AI, it extends Hugging Face’s software ecosystem into physical devices. VentureBeat describes Hugging Face as a company best known for hosting open-source AI models, agents, and applications [2]. Reachy Mini applies a similar distribution idea to a robot that can run interactive AI experiences at a desk [
1][
3].
The app examples point to three broad categories.
First are interaction apps, such as LLM-powered conversation, where the robot becomes a physical interface for AI systems [1]. Second are perception apps, such as hand tracking, where the robot reacts to input from sensors or cameras [
1]. Third are lightweight utility and entertainment apps, such as radio, that make the robot feel more like a usable desktop device than a bare development kit [
1].
If the ecosystem grows, Reachy Mini could become a practical testbed for speech interfaces, classroom robotics, computer-vision demos, and small-scale embodied AI experiments. That outcome is not guaranteed, but the app store gives developers a common place to publish and discover those experiments [1].
An app store does not automatically create a durable robotics platform. VentureBeat’s reported figure of about 200 apps shows early breadth, but an app count alone does not prove long-term quality, reliability, or usefulness on real hardware [2].
Adoption will matter, too. Seeed Studio wrote in January 2026 that it had shipped 3,000 Reachy Mini units together with Hugging Face and Pollen Robotics [13]. That is a real starting point for a developer-focused robot, but the store’s value will depend on whether the installed base keeps growing and whether app creators continue maintaining their projects.
There is also a practical gap between software demos and robust robot skills. Robot apps may need to handle latency, lighting, sensor calibration, hardware variation, and network conditions. The available sources establish the store, example apps, hardware capabilities, and early app count; they do not yet establish how reliable the broader app catalog will be over time [1][
2][
3].
Hugging Face’s Reachy Mini app store is best understood as early infrastructure for open-source embodied AI. It gives a low-cost, programmable desktop robot a software-style distribution model: installable apps, shared demos, and a community path for reuse [1][
12].
If developers keep building and maintaining useful apps, Reachy Mini could help more people move from AI models on a screen to AI behaviors in a physical device. If not, the store may remain a collection of interesting demos. Either way, it is a notable experiment in making robotics more open, shareable, and approachable.
In the CES keynote today, Jensen Huang demonstrated how to do exactly that, using the processing power of NVIDIA DGX Spark with Reachy Mini , an open-source desktop robot by Hugging Face and Pollen Robotics, to create your own personal office R2-D2 that you...