Walk into any hardware store or scroll through Amazon long enough, and you’ll find no shortage of robot lawn mowers promising wire-free setup, AI navigation, app control, and obstacle detection. The features barely change from one brand to another. So, when RobotPlusPlus, a Chinese robot manufacturing company, launched the Goko M6 lawn mower on Kickstarter, it had an uphill task to outdo Anthbot, Mammotion, Roborock, Sunseeker, and many other competitors that are firmly established in the market.

Interestingly, the brand has prioritized design alongside functionality. To put that into perspective, Goko M6 features a Cybertruck-inspired body and a 4WD drivetrain. Furthermore, it is claimed that the mower can scale a 90 percent incline (42-degree slopes) with ease, which certainly makes it worth a second look. We’ll get to all these features one by one.

To begin with, M6’s biggest USP is its Cybertruck-influenced design. Whether you find it bold or a bit much, it’s hard to ignore. Complementing the looks is M6’s 4.3-inch TFT LCD color display and a tactile control knob that lets you check mowing status, battery level, and set mowing schedules. When it comes to engineering behind the module, M6 leans on its 4WD drivetrain, high-torque motors, independent front-wheel steering, and adaptive suspension.

Oversized rugged tires give it grip on steep slopes, while the suspension smooths out bumps and uneven patches, clearing obstacles up to three inches without losing stability or leaving an uneven cut. The independent front-wheel steering also allows tighter turns with less turf scuffing, something that matters if you take your lawn seriously.

Navigation is highly important for robotic mowers, and M6 doesn’t disappoint in this regard. It relies on CyberNav, a fusion system combining RTK, network RTK, visual SLAM, an IMU, and wheel odometry. The result, according to Goko, is “centimeter-level positioning accuracy that holds up under dense tree canopy, through narrow passages, and across complex yard layouts that tend to trip up simpler GPS-only systems.”

The lawn mower also features a QuadVision AI system that adds four cameras to the mix, identifying over 200 types of objects, including people, pets, garden furniture, and toys, so the mower routes around them rather than bumping into them.

Cutting performance comes from a choice of two blade configurations. The two-blade rotary setup handles heavy-duty work in thick or overgrown grass, while the 12-blade razor disc is built for a finer, more manicured finish. Two 250W motors deliver a combined 500W of cutting power, with blade speeds up to 5,000 RPM, enough to push through wet weeds and tall grass without bogging down. The 16.5-inch cutting deck adjusts from one to four inches in height and floats to follow ground contours rather than scalping the high spots.

Power comes from an expandable dual-battery system rated for up to six hours of runtime, covering up to two acres in a single day. When the charge runs low, the M6 finds its docking station and recharges on its own. There’s plenty of competition in this space, and most of it is genuinely capable. But between the terrain handling, the navigation stack, and its distinctly odd design, the Goko M6 has enough going on to stand apart, at least on paper. Whether it delivers on real lawns will be the test that matters. For now, it is crowdfunding on Kickstarter and can be availed at an Early Bird price of $1900.

Image: GOKO
Image: GOKO
Image: GOKO
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Atish Sharma is a seasoned journalist, theatre director, and PR specialist with over ten years of experience in print, electronic, and digital media, based in Shimla, India. He's played pivotal roles as a field journalist at Hindustan Times and currently serves as the Managing Editor at Homecrux, where he writes on consumer technology, design, and outdoor gear. When not working on his writing projects, Atish loves to explore new Kickstarter projects, watch cult classic films, interview designers, and ponder existential questions.

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