It weighs only 7 kg but contains an artificial intelligence trained on 8000 hours of coaching. The Tenniix robotic tennis coach adapts to your level and responds to your movements.

The robotic tennis coach Tennisix di T-Apex, presented a few days ago on Kickstarter, is the evolution of a sector that seemed frozen: now, from simple ball-throwing machines we move on to a mobile robot that follows you, analyzes your game and responds accordingly.

It is no coincidence that the project reached its funding goal in just five minutes. Because this is not just technology, it is a methodological revolution in training.

A Robot Tennis Coach That Responds to Your Movements

Tenniix, is not the usual ball launcher that we all know. It is an intelligent robot with its integrated 1080p camera, can track your movements on the court and respond in real time. The robot adapts the trajectory, speed and spin based on where you are positioned and how you move. Like a real-life tennis coach.

The device He has been trained on more than 8000 hours of professional coaching and real meetings, which allows it to understand the dynamics of the game and adapt to any skill level. With its gimbal that allows for a 46° horizontal rotation and a 50° vertical rotation, it can simulate virtually any shot: from high lobs to powerful forehands on the baseline.

Tenniix robot suits to amateur players. but with his ability to hit serves at up to 120 km/h makes him a challenging opponent even for good level players.

The cool thing is that this robotic tennis coach can be customized with over 1000 preset exercises. It  offer something no coach can guarantee: 24/7 availability and absolute consistency in its shots.

The robot is offered in three versions: Basic, Pro and Ultra. The most advertised version, includes a module with voice control via bracelet and an app that stores the data collected during the sessions.

T-Apex companies Tenniix robot’s practicality: it can hold up to 100 balls and the battery lasts about four hours (enough to hit something like 4000 serves).

The future of tennis training may will be increasingly technological.