Vol. II · No. 07 · Review Under $500
Fashion for Humanoid Robots
Review
2026-07-08
How we test
Review · Unitree G1

Dressing your Unitree G1: the hobbyist wardrobe reviewed

Modular fabric shells, printed accessories, and the growing catalogue of aftermarket kits cut for the G1's compact form. What we recommend for research programmes, educational deployments, and ambient hospitality demos.

Editor's Choice

The Hong Kong hobbyist modular kit, Version 3

Best-in-test for the price bracket. Modular fabric shells cut specifically for the G1's compact form, three interchangeable outer layers, printed accessories that dress the head assembly appropriately for ambient demonstrations. USD 320 for the base kit.

Fit
4.5
Modularity
4.8
Aesthetics
4.0
Durability
4.2
Overall
4.4/5

The G1 dressing question is different

The Unitree G1 is a research platform, an educational substrate, and an increasingly common presence at fashion week ambient installations. At USD 13,500 for the base configuration, the G1 is affordable enough to be procured by academic groups, robotics education programmes, and independent creators who could not budget for the enterprise-tier humanoids. Its dressing market has developed accordingly: aftermarket kits from independent manufacturers, largely priced under USD 500, that let the buyer configure the platform's appearance for specific purposes.

This is a fundamentally different buying question from the couture-focused reviews we run for the Optimus and Figure 03. The G1 buyer is not procuring for a hospitality shift; they are procuring for a demonstration, a research setting, or an educational programme where the platform's specific appearance matters at the level of a costume rather than a service uniform.

Editor's Choice, in detail

The Hong Kong hobbyist modular kit

The kit that has established itself as the reference product in the sub-USD-500 category. Three outer layers (technical grey, warm cream, editorial black), a printed head accessory library, and a modular attachment system that lets the buyer reconfigure in minutes. Fits the G1 pattern cleanly and holds through the demonstrations we tested. The version 3 update earlier this year improved the shoulder joint clearance meaningfully.

Runners-up

The Shanghai educational kit

Cheaper than the Hong Kong pick (USD 190 base), designed for classroom demonstrations. Fit is looser and durability under repeated donning is lower, but for a classroom setting where the kit will be donned and doffed by different students, the price-to-durability ratio is defensible. Overall: 3.9/5.

The Berlin editorial one-piece

A designer-cut single-piece garment from a small Berlin atelier. The most expensive piece we evaluated in the G1 category (USD 890) and, notably, the piece that looks best in ambient installations. Fit is exceptional. Value depends on whether the buyer needs the aesthetic differential. Overall: 4.2/5.

Buying advice

If you are procuring for a research group, take the Hong Kong hobbyist kit. If you are procuring for a classroom, take the Shanghai educational kit. If you are procuring for a fashion week ambient installation or a gallery deployment, take the Berlin editorial one-piece and treat it as an art-director expense rather than a dressing expense.

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