Let’s be honest—when someone says “robotic wolf you can ride,” your brain probably short-circuits a little. But Kawasaki’s new prototype, CORLEO, is very real, and it’s rewriting the rules of rough terrain travel one hoof-step at a time.
Unveiled ahead of the Osaka-Kansai Expo 2025, CORLEO is Kawasaki’s latest leap into next-gen mobility—a four-legged, hydrogen-powered robo-beast designed to carry humans over rugged landscapes. Inspired by nature’s most agile climbers (wolves, goats, your average park enthusiast), CORLEO sports four AI-powered legs, each ending in a hoof made of slip-resistant rubber that adapts to terrain like gravel, grass or rock.
It's not just a cool ride—it’s a clean one. Powered by a hydrogen fuel cell and a 150cc engine, CORLEO fits into Japan’s broader push for a low-carbon future. No revving engines or fumes—just the gentle clop-clop of futuristic transport with zero tailpipe drama. Rather than steering with handlebars, riders shift their weight to guide CORLEO, like a horse—if that horse had a heads-up display and robotic precision. It’s still early days (commercial release isn’t expected for another 25 years), but the prototype is already turning heads.
We love it because we believe mobility is an art form, and we understand all too well how terrain doesn’t play favorites. Just like CORLEO was designed to adapt to the harsh outdoors like a wolf on the prowl, Hamilton wheels like our TerraTech casters are engineered to roll smoothly over rough, uneven terrain.
So you can lead the pack on productivity.