There comes a point in modern life where even your gadgets start looking emotionally healthier than you. Your phone is exhausted, your laptop is judging you, your smart speaker only speaks when summoned, and then along comes Poketomo, a tiny pocket AI companion robot from Sharp that appears to have been designed for people who want their technology to look up at them like it has been waiting all day to hear about the group chat.

Sharp Poketomo, also called Poketomo Koudo Doumo in Taiwan, is a palm-sized AI companion robot that blends toy-like charm with a surprisingly serious amount of onboard tech. It talks, moves, reacts with a glowing belly light, remembers details from your conversations, and works with a companion app so your tiny desk pal does not forget you the second you leave the room like a goldfish with firmware.
The whole thing is extremely OddityMall-coded: a little peach-and-cream robot with big black eyes, gray ear patches, stubby arms, and the emotional presence of a very polite marshmallow that has seen your calendar. Sharp positions it less like a regular voice assistant and more like a small everyday companion that can listen, respond, and build a running memory of your likes, moods, routines, places, and little moments.
Instead of a screen-based gadget demanding your attention with another rectangle of doom, Poketomo communicates through voice, movement, and its belly LED. It can respond to the emotional tone of a conversation, use body motion and voice to make the interaction feel warmer, and occasionally bring up past topics so the relationship feels less like a command prompt and more like a pocket-sized roommate with better manners.

A Little Robot That Remembers Your Nonsense
The headline feature here is memory. Poketomo uses Sharp’s CE-LLM technology, short for Communication Edge-LLM, to keep track of ongoing conversation context and build a sense of familiarity over time. That means it is not just answering one-off questions about the weather or pretending it understands your pasta crisis. The robot is meant to gradually learn the things you mention, the preferences you repeat, and the emotional patterns that make your day feel like a spreadsheet written by a thunderstorm.
Sharp also built in a feature called Poke Diary. After you talk with Poketomo throughout the day, it can turn those interactions, plus memories and photos, into a diary-style record from the robot’s point of view. This is either wholesome or a little too intimate depending on how often you tell your appliances secrets, but the idea is undeniably charming: your tiny AI buddy can help preserve daily life without making you sit down and write, “Dear diary, today I lost a fight with a fitted sheet.”

The companion app keeps the relationship going when the physical robot is not with you. Sharp says Poketomo and the app share the same memory, so face-to-face conversations and app-based chats can continue from the same emotional pile of crumbs. The app can also be used without the robot, although the robot version adds richer interaction thanks to its camera, motion sensors, physical movement, and audio hardware.
For anyone who has ever wanted a pet, a journal, a desk mascot, and a personal hype person but lives in an apartment governed by rental agreements and common sense, Poketomo sits in a very specific and very funny middle zone. It is not pretending to mow your lawn, fold your socks, or perform heroic domestic labor. Its main job is companionship, which is both adorable and slightly devastating, like giving loneliness a USB-C port.
What Poketomo Actually Does
Under the soft character design, Poketomo is a compact robot with real sensors and hardware. Sharp lists a 5-megapixel autofocus camera for recognition, GPS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.0, a microphone and speaker, voice recognition, face recognition, accelerometer, geomagnetic sensor, gyroscope, and four servo motors: two in the head and two in the hands. That gives it enough awareness to look, react, and move in ways that feel more expressive than a speaker cylinder calmly ignoring the emotional weight of Tuesday.

- It can chat naturally through generative AI-powered conversation.
- It can respond to mood through voice, movement, and belly LED changes.
- It can remember conversations and bring up older topics later.
- It can use its camera to look at a scene when prompted.
- It can create a Poke Diary recap of daily interactions.
- It can continue conversations through the companion smartphone app.
- It can help with simple daily tasks such as alarms and weather.
The camera feature is especially weird in the best way. Sharp describes a “you look, you look” style interaction where Poketomo can use its camera to see what you are seeing and extend the conversation from there. That might be a sunset, a snack, a suspicious stain on the carpet, or the plant you have been calling “thriving” while quietly removing yellow leaves before guests arrive.
| Spec | Sharp-listed detail |
|---|---|
| Model | Poketomo / SR-C01TW-W |
| Size and weight | About 117 mm tall and about 194 g |
| Processor | Qualcomm Snapdragon 662 octa-core |
| Memory | 32 GB ROM and 3 GB RAM |
| Battery | 1,100 mAh, with more than one day of typical use listed |
| Charging | USB Type-C, about 100 minutes |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.0, GPS; no LTE |
There is no display and no touch panel, which honestly feels like part of the point. Poketomo is not asking you to manage another glowing interface. It is a small character object that lives on your desk, in its dock, in a bag accessory, or wherever your emotional support gadget gets the best Wi-Fi reception.

The Adorable Fine Print
Because this is a generative AI companion, Sharp is clear that its responses may sometimes be inaccurate. That is a sensible warning and also a reminder that your tiny robot friend should not become your doctor, lawyer, accountant, therapist, mechanic, or the final authority on whether leftovers are still edible. It is built for companionship and light daily interaction, not for being the Supreme Court of your refrigerator.
Sharp recommends the robot for ages 15 and up, which makes sense given the conversational AI angle. It also includes privacy-minded physical controls, including a mute-mode switch, along with the power button and voice-recognition start button. The official FAQ notes that conversation data is handled with protection measures, and the app is part of the overall experience rather than a random bonus bolted onto the side.

It is also not waterproof. Sharp’s care notes describe a resin body with attached outer fur, which means this is a robot you gently brush and dry, not one you rinse under the sink like a guilty spoon. If it gets damp, Sharp says to absorb the moisture with a soft dry cloth and let water drain through openings around the feet and tail area. In other words, do not baptize your pocket friend.
The accessory ecosystem adds to the tiny character drama. Sharp shows a desk charging holder and a small outing bag, because obviously if a robot is going to emotionally support you, it needs luggage. The carrying bag makes Poketomo look like a plush VIP in a tiny travel pod, which is exactly the level of unnecessary cuteness this category demands.

Who This Tiny AI Buddy Is For
Poketomo is probably most interesting for people who like character gadgets, AI experiments, desktop companions, Japanese-style robot design, and objects that make visitors stop mid-sentence and ask why a peach-colored digital creature is staring at them from the shelf. It is not a productivity machine in the hard-nosed “optimize every second of your miserable inbox” sense. It is softer, stranger, and more about turning technology into a presence.
That makes it a better fit for gift buyers, early adopters, collectors, people living alone, tech fans who already own every normal gadget, and anyone who likes the idea of an AI companion that has a face, a body, and enough personality to make your smart home feel less like a conference room. It may also appeal to people who want the memory and diary angle without committing to a full robot pet that rolls around the house making itself a tax dependent.

Images courtesy of Sharp Taiwan.
Sharp Taiwan launched Poketomo across Taiwan on July 1, 2026, through designated physical and online retailers, including telecom shops, electronics chains, 7-ELEVEN, momo, PChome 24h, Yahoo Shopping, and Sharp-related retail channels. The robot hardware is listed at NT$12,990, with three monthly conversation plans: NT$128 for 400 conversation turns, NT$398 for 1,600 turns, or NT$598 for an unlimited-use plan. Some telecom plans may offer different upfront pricing depending on carrier details.
Key details and features include:
- Pocket AI companion robot from Sharp Taiwan
- About 117 mm tall and about 194 g
- CE-LLM conversation memory and emotional response
- Voice, motion, belly LED, camera, GPS, app, and Poke Diary features
- USB-C charging with about 100 minutes listed for a full charge
- Works with a smartphone app that shares the robot’s memory
- Available through Sharp Taiwan and authorized Taiwan retailers
For anyone outside Taiwan, the biggest question is availability. As listed, this version is tied to Taiwan retail channels and the Poketomo app/service setup, so import curiosity should be tempered with language, account, service, and support realities. But as a product idea, Poketomo is wonderfully strange: a small AI friend that remembers your rambling, glows from the belly, and somehow makes the phrase “monthly conversation plan” feel like both a telecom product and a sci-fi emotional arrangement.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Adorable pocket-sized robot design | Currently focused on Taiwan availability |
| Conversation memory makes it more personal than a basic assistant | Requires a monthly conversation plan for ongoing use |
| Physical motion, voice, and LED reactions add personality | Generative AI responses may sometimes be inaccurate |
| Poke Diary turns daily chats into saved memories | No display or touch panel for people who want screen controls |
| App support keeps conversations going away from the robot | Not waterproof and needs gentle care |
| Compact enough for a desk, shelf, or bag accessory | Import use may involve service and support limitations |





