Smart home devices have gotten remarkably good at answering questions and playing music, but they’ve always had one big limitation: they stay put. A speaker on the kitchen counter can’t check on an elderly parent who hasn’t moved in hours, or trail a curious toddler around the house. For families trying to stay connected and keep everyone safe, that gap has always been difficult to bridge.
Enabot’s EBO Max FamilyBot takes a completely different approach. It’s a compact, round-bodied robot roughly the size of a football, with expressive oversized eyes and the ability to roll independently through every room of your home. Rather than sitting on a shelf waiting to be spoken to, the EBO Max goes looking for the people it’s come to know, without needing to be told.
Designer: Enabot


What makes the EBO Max different is its multimodal AI. Unlike the reactive AI in earlier models that only responds to direct commands and retains no memory, it processes what it sees and hears with genuine context. It recognizes family members by their faces, voices, and how they carry themselves, remembering routines and preferences, and it’s built to grow more useful the longer it stays in your home.


For kids, the EBO Max is something closer to a playmate than a gadget. It answers questions, joins in on simple games, and keeps children company with a curiosity that actually feels engaging. For the adults running the household, it quietly handles reminders, helps keep tabs on what’s happening at home, and keeps everyone looped in through the app without becoming another interruption in an already busy day.


For elderly family members, it carries even more weight. The EBO Max can detect falls and instantly send alerts, which is the kind of safety net that gives everyone a little more peace of mind. It rolls over to check on them, stays close when needed, and keeps them company in a way that a fixed camera in the corner of a room simply can’t replicate.

When you’re away from home, the EBO Max keeps that connection from feeling distant. It streams 4K video through an 8MP wide-angle camera with a 131-degree field of view, so you can hop on a two-way call and actually see what’s going on. You can also direct it to specific spots around the house by voice or through the app, turning it into a mobile eye you control.

The EBO Max handles its own movement using V-SLAM navigation, a system that maps and remembers the layout of your home for more accurate positioning and smoother routes. It can patrol on a set schedule, cover the entire house on its own, or be pointed at marked spots for targeted check-ins. When the battery runs low, it finds its way back to the docking station without any prompting.

The EBO Max FamilyBot is available for pre-order at $549.99, which feels steep until you start accounting for what it replaces: separate cameras, smart speakers, and the quiet worry of not knowing what’s happening at home. It doesn’t do everything perfectly, but as an AI-powered companion that moves, learns, and actually keeps an eye out, it’s a more thoughtful answer to family care than a camera stuck to the wall.
