By the time humanoid sex robots reach the consumer market, the most surprising element will not be their existence but their price and how predictably that price follows earlier technology curves. While public discussion often swings between science-fiction fantasy and ethical panic, manufacturers and investors are focused on a far more practical issue: how expensive these machines will be and how quickly costs will fall once production scales. Today’s market offers a useful baseline. High-end silicone dolls dominate sales, typically priced from a few thousand dollars to the low five figures depending on customization and materials. Some models integrate basic AI through companion apps, allowing limited conversation and personality simulation, but the bodies themselves remain static. When rudimentary robotics such as head movement, facial motors, or heating systems are added, prices can climb into the mid-five-figure range, despite the technology remaining visibly early stage. The reas...