This robot lawn mower promises to traverse awkward lawns with the agility of a mountain goat

Estimated read time 4 min read


The Lymow One is a robotic lawn mower that’s designed specifically for tackling large, complex lawns. In fact, its makers promise this rugged lawn bot has “unparalleled terrain adaptability” and can cover five times as much lawn as competitor models (specifically, 0.23 acres per hour, or up to 1.73 acres each day).

Most lawnbots have wheels, but this guy comes with tracks like a tank, for improved speed and stability. It can clear obstacles up to two inches in height and traverse inclines of up to 45 degrees, even if said incline is wet and slippery.

This bot is currently showing at CES 2025, following a successful Kickstarter campaign from a relatively new brand. It has piqued my interest specifically because founder and CEO Wangshu Gao used to run the R&D department at SharkNinja and also previously co-founded Narwal. That means he has experience with some of the best robot vacuums around, and while it’s not exactly the same thing, it seems he’s brought plenty of expertise from that related market into creating the Lymow One.

Lymow One lawnbot mowing some grass

(Image credit: Lymow)

For starters, special attention has been paid to navigation; like many newer lawnbots, it doesn’t require boundary wires. There are a few ways robot lawn mowers can navigate, but Lymow’s approach combines satellite positioning with vSLAM technology. The latter is designed to take over when trees, roofs or walls block the satellite view, and is one of the navigation methods used by robot vacuums. You can edit the bot’s maps to great mowing zones and no-go areas.





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